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Saturday, February 28, 2026

The Poet: Theodore Roethke, "In a Dark Time"

"In a Dark Time"

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

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

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

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

- Theodore Roethke

"Are People Really Stupid?"

“All of the available data show that the typical American citizen has about
as much interest in the life of the mind as does your average armadillo.”
- Morris Berman

"Are People Really Stupid?"
by Fred Russell

"On the face of things, judging from the general level of knowledge and understanding, not to mention the intellectual pursuits, of most of the human race one is tempted to say that the overwhelming majority of mankind lacks the intellectual capacity, the intelligence, to contribute to human progress. And it is in fact a very small elite that has carried us beyond Neanderthal Man, without whom, if the truth be told, we might still be living in caves. It is, in a word, appalling to contemplate the level at which ordinary people use their minds, what they read, if at all, what they watch on TV, the movies they go out and see, and the ease with which they are seduced and manipulated by the technicians of the psyche, namely, politicians and advertisers.

The impression one gets when contemplating these tens and hundreds of millions of people glued to their TV screens for the reality shows and sitcoms or fiddling with their smartphones from morning till night is of complete empty-headedness. This is not to say that such people cannot be shrewd, resourceful, or, for that matter, simply decent. It is to say that at the average level of intelligence displayed by the human race, the great intellectual achievements of mankind seem to be beyond the scope of the vast majority of men and women. But are people really stupid? And if they aren't, who or what has held them back?

Now one may be inclined to place all the blame for our ignorance on the television producers and gadget makers, but the truth is that by the time they get to us the damage has already been done. All they really succeed in doing is dragging us down a little further. The problem starts in childhood. It starts in the schools with all those empty cells waiting to be filled and no one, not entire educational systems, really knowing how to fill them. In fact, the opposite result is achieved. By the time the child finishes elementary school, unless he is destined to join the intellectual or scientific or economic or political elite and is self-motivated, as the saying goes, he will have developed an aversion to the learning process that will persist for the rest of his life.

It is not hard to understand why. School bores him, and oppresses him. Its premise, fostered in the West by the Church the virtually exclusive supplier of teachers until fairly recent times, historically speaking is that as a consequence of Original Sin all men are born evil and must therefore be coerced into doing what is good. The result has been rigidly structured frameworks where teachers hammer away at the captive child until his head is ready to explode. Within just a few years, the public school system thus destroys the natural curiosity of the child and dooms him to a life of total ignorance, dependent, for whatever sense of the world he does have, on second rate journalists, who themselves lack the knowledge, understanding, discipline and integrity to be historians or even novelists and therefore shape his perception like the ignorant clerics of the Middle Ages, raining down on his head a disjointed and superficial body of information presented largely to produce effects, and even this is beyond his capacity to retain.

The man in the street may thus be said to have a great many opinions but very little knowledge, mindlessly repeating the half-truths of experts and analysts who reflect his own biases and constructing out of them a credo of dogmatic views that remain embedded in his mind for an entire lifetime like bricks in a brick wall.

Does it matter? After all, we have all the scholars and scientists we need, and besides, a world where everyone became one would be a dull place indeed. It can even be argued that it is better for the race if progress is opposed, since, judging from its products, it mostly expresses itself materially and economically in an unholy alliance of greed and technology. However, progress of this kind cannot be fought if all that people have on their minds is to wire themselves into this technology, and that is what they will be doing until their minds are engaged in less frivolous pursuits. They are thus doubly victimized, first by the schools, whose methods are not attuned to the temperament and capacity of the average child, and then by the economic elites who control the technologies and consequently the flow of information and whose only interest in the man in the street is as a consumer of their products.

Unfortunately, there is very little hope that any of this will change. The wrong people control human society and will continue to do so, because they created the model and are the only ones who know how to operate it. The sad truth is that today's man in the street is neither wiser nor more knowledgeable than a medieval peasant. Calling ourselves Homo sapiens, or even Homo sapiens sapiens, seemed like a good idea once but very few of us have lived up to the billing."

Apologies to armadillos for this comparison.

"The Unbreakable Message"

"The Unbreakable Message"
By Dr. Robert W. Malone

"The Unbreakable Message: Quantum communication is no longer a physics thought experiment. It’s being deployed right now, and it’s going to change who controls secrets, who wins wars, and who you can trust online.

There is a physics rule that changes everything about how we think about secrets. It goes like this: you cannot observe a quantum system without disturbing it. Not because our instruments are clumsy. Not because we haven’t built good enough technology yet. Because the universe, at its most fundamental level, does not allow it.

This sounds like an obscure footnote in a physics textbook. It is not. It is the foundation of a communications revolution that is quietly unfolding right now, one that promises to make certain kinds of messages genuinely, physically impossible to intercept without detection. Not hard to intercept. Not expensive to intercept. Impossible to intercept.

Governments know this. China has already built a 2,000-kilometer quantum communication network between Beijing and Shanghai, and in 2017 demonstrated satellite-based quantum communication over 1,200 kilometers.1 The European Union has a continent-wide quantum network in development. The United States, Japan, South Korea, and the UK all have major national programs running. Banks in Europe and Asia have piloted quantum-secured trading links. The technology exists. It works. The question is no longer whether quantum communication reshapes the world, but when and on whose terms. So let’s talk about what this actually is, who it matters to, and why you should be paying attention even if you have never thought about a photon in your life.

The physics, explained without the physics: Every time you send a message today, whether it’s a text, a bank transfer, or a classified government cable, it gets scrambled using mathematics. The scrambling is based on mathematical problems that are very hard to solve, specifically, factoring enormous numbers into their prime components. Break the math, and you read the message. This is the foundation of essentially all modern encryption.

The problem is that “very hard” is not the same as “impossible.” It just means that today’s computers would take longer than the age of the universe to crack the code. Tomorrow’s computers might not. And right now, governments and intelligence agencies around the world are almost certainly storing encrypted communications they’ve intercepted, banking on the possibility that a sufficiently powerful quantum computer, once built, will let them reach back through time and read messages that were sent years or decades ago. Security researchers have a name for this: harvest now, decrypt later. It is not paranoia. It is a rational strategy that any serious intelligence service would pursue.

Quantum communication offers a fundamentally different kind of security that doesn’t rely on mathematics at all. It relies on physics. Three ideas are at the heart of it.

The first is quantum superposition. A normal computer bit is either a zero or a one. A quantum bit, called a qubit, can be both simultaneously, until the moment you measure it, at which point it settles into one or the other. Think of it like a coin spinning in the air. It’s not heads or tails yet. It’s both.

The second is quantum entanglement. Two particles can be linked in such a way that measuring one instantly determines the state of the other, no matter how far apart they are. Einstein called this “spooky action at a distance” and spent years refusing to believe it was real. Decades of experiments have confirmed that it is. When you measure one entangled particle, its partner responds instantly, across any distance. Einstein called it “spooky action at a distance.” Decades of experiments have confirmed that it is very real, and very useful.

The third is the no-cloning theorem, which states that you cannot perfectly copy an unknown quantum state. This one sounds technical but its implications are enormous: if you intercept a quantum message and try to read it, you have to measure the quantum particles carrying that message, and the act of measuring changes them. The message arrives at the other end subtly altered, and the people communicating know immediately that someone was listening.

Put these three things together, and you get Quantum Key Distribution, or QKD, the core technology of quantum communication. Instead of relying on mathematical complexity to protect a secret key, QKD relies on physics. Alice and Bob, as cryptographers conventionally call the two parties communicating, exchange individual photons, particles of light, to generate a shared secret key. If Eve, the eavesdropper, intercepts those photons to measure them, she inevitably disturbs them. Alice and Bob detect the disturbance. They throw out the compromised key and try again. Eve gets nothing.

The first QKD protocol, known as BB84, was proposed by Charles Bennett and Gilles Brassard in 1984.3 It took decades to go from a theoretical proposal to working hardware. That hardware now exists and is being deployed. Commercially. Today.

The Key Engineering Problem: Photons carrying quantum information are absorbed and scattered as they travel through fiber-optic cable. Classical systems solve signal loss by amplifying the signal at intervals, but you cannot amplify a quantum state without copying it, which the no-cloning theorem forbids. “Quantum repeaters,” devices that extend the range of quantum networks using entanglement swapping and quantum memory, are the central unsolved engineering challenge. Most experts expect them to mature within a decade, at which point the range limitations that currently restrict quantum networks will largely disappear.
Why militaries are racing to deploy this

If you want to understand who is taking quantum communication most seriously, look at who is spending the most money on it. The answer is the same institutions that have always cared most about the integrity of secret messages: militaries and intelligence agencies.

The nuclear problem: The most consequential application is one that almost nobody publicly discusses: securing nuclear command-and-control systems. The communications chain between a national leader and nuclear forces must work flawlessly under any circumstances, including a decapitation strike, and must be impossible to fake or intercept. A spoofed launch order is among the worst imaginable scenarios in international security. A quantum-secured nuclear command network would provide a layer of physical assurance that classical encryption, which relies on mathematical complexity, cannot match.

The submarine problem: Communicating with submarines is one of the oldest unsolved problems in naval warfare. Current very-low-frequency radio systems are slow, have limited bandwidth, and emit signals that can be detected. Researchers are investigating quantum optical channels using blue-green wavelengths of light, which penetrate seawater, as well as satellite-to-submarine quantum links. The strategic value of maintaining covert, reliable, quantum-secured communication with ballistic missile submarines, platforms whose entire purpose is to be undetectable, is obvious.

The “harvest now, decrypt later” arms race: Every major intelligence service is almost certainly recording encrypted communications today that they cannot yet read, hoping that advances in quantum computing will eventually let them crack the encryption retroactively. This is a race with an uncertain finish line. Quantum communication sidesteps the race entirely. A message transmitted via QKD cannot be harvested for later decryption, because any interception is immediately detected and the key is discarded. Nations that move their most sensitive communications onto quantum networks first gain a permanent, physics-guaranteed communications advantage over those that don’t.
Sensing the invisible

Quantum communication’s military significance extends beyond sending messages. Related quantum technologies promise to detect things that are currently invisible. Quantum-enhanced radar using entangled photons can detect objects with sensitivity beyond classical radar, with potential applications against stealth aircraft. Quantum gravimeters can detect submarines, underground bunkers, and tunneling activity through subtle gravitational signatures, without emitting any detectable signal. Quantum inertial navigation provides GPS-accurate positioning without GPS itself, which is vulnerable to jamming and spoofing. Several militaries have demonstrated operational prototypes of these systems. They are not theoretical. Nations that move their most sensitive communications onto quantum networks first gain a permanent, physics-guaranteed advantage over those that don’t.

What this means for the rest of us: Quantum communication will not stay in the hands of militaries and governments. The same technology that secures launch codes eventually secures everything else. Here is where it goes next.

Your money: Financial institutions were among the first civilian adopters of QKD technology, for the obvious reason that they move enormous amounts of money over networks that are constantly under attack. Several European and Asian banks have completed QKD pilot programs for high-value interbank transactions. Central Bank Digital Currencies, which dozens of governments are actively developing, will need communication security that cannot be undermined by future quantum computers. QKD is the natural fit.

Your medical records: Genomic data is uniquely personal and permanently sensitive. Unlike a compromised password, you cannot change your DNA. The same is true of much medical information. As hospitals, research institutions, and pharmaceutical companies share increasingly sensitive data across networks, the case for quantum-secured medical communications becomes harder to dismiss. Attacks on hospital networks are already a routine feature of the threat landscape. Quantum communication offers a way to significantly reduce their reward.

The power grid, the water supply, and the internet itself: Real-world cyberattacks on power infrastructure in Ukraine and water treatment facilities in the United States have demonstrated that critical infrastructure is genuinely vulnerable. The control systems managing these facilities, known as SCADA systems, communicate over networks that are poorly secured by most conventional standards, let alone quantum ones. Quantum-secured communication links between control centers and field equipment would add a layer of protection that is physically guaranteed rather than dependent on software patches and mathematical assumptions.

A different kind of internet: The most transformative long-term vision is the quantum internet: a global network layer that distributes entanglement between nodes, enabling quantum-secured communication between any two points on Earth. This would not replace the classical internet but would add a quantum layer that changes the security architecture of global communications fundamentally. Researchers have demonstrated small quantum networks in city-scale experiments. The path to a global quantum network runs through the quantum repeater problem, and most researchers expect that problem to be solved within the next decade.

When that happens, the most exciting possibility is not just secure communication. It is distributed quantum computing: quantum processors in different cities, connected by quantum networks, sharing entanglement to perform calculations that no single machine could execute. The implications for drug discovery, materials science, climate modeling, and artificial intelligence are difficult to overstate.

The geopolitics nobody is talking about: There is a quiet competition underway that deserves more public attention than it receives. China has made quantum communication a national strategic priority in a way that few other countries have matched. The Beijing-to-Shanghai network is operational. The Micius satellite is flying. Chinese research output in quantum communication has grown dramatically over the past decade.

The United States has responded with significant DARPA investment and a classified set of programs whose scope is unknown. Europe is building the EuroQCI network across member states, aiming for operational capability by the late 2020s.5 Japan, South Korea, Singapore, and the UK all have serious national programs.

What is at stake in this competition is not merely communications security for individual governments. It is the architecture of the global information environment for the coming century. Whichever nations establish their quantum networks first, develop compatible standards, and build the infrastructure that others depend upon will have a structural advantage analogous to the advantage the United States gained by building the backbone of the early internet.

The risk of fragmentation is real. If Chinese and Western quantum network standards develop in isolation, the result could be a quantum communication divide that mirrors and deepens existing geopolitical fault lines, a world in which Beijing’s quantum network and Washington’s quantum network are incompatible, and nations must choose sides not just politically but technologically.

What comes next, and when: Quantum communication won't appear on your smartphone next year. The hardware is still expensive, the range without repeaters is limited, and the data rates are low. For now, QKD handles key exchange rather than high-bandwidth data transmission, which means it works alongside classical encryption rather than replacing it.

But the trajectory is clear, and it follows the same curve as every disruptive, transformative technology before it. First, deployment at high-value, fixed strategic links where cost is not the primary consideration: national command authorities, financial institution interconnects, nuclear facilities. Then, as hardware miniaturizes and quantum repeater technology matures, expansion to a wider range of government and commercial users. Then, over the longer horizon, something approaching ubiquity.

The honest timeline for widespread consumer quantum communication is probably two to three decades. The timeline for quantum communication to become a defining feature of strategic competition between major powers is already here. The race is on. The physics is real. And the message that cannot be intercepted is closer than most people realize."

How It Really Is"

"If only"... you don't stop because you can't stop.
If you do it's all over. It's all over anyway, you're just buying time.
Tell me I'm wrong...
o
"2026 Credit Card Debt Statistics"
By Dan Shepherd
"Americans have an absolute mountain of credit card debt -  $1.277 trillion, to be exact. This credit card debt statistics page tracks Americans’ credit card use each month. We update this page regularly, examining the amount of debt people have, how often they carry a balance from month to month, how frequently they pay their credit card bills late and more."

Dan, I Allegedly, "This Is Not A Recession, It's A Corporate Reset"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 2/28/26
"This Is Not A Recession, It's A Corporate Reset"
"Corporate America is not just “cutting costs” - we are witnessing a full-scale corporate reset. In today’s breaking news update, Dan from iAllegedly exposes the growing wave of layoffs, store closures, media losses, and massive corporate restructuring that proves this is far bigger than a normal recession. From Papa John’s closing hundreds of stores to tech companies betting everything on AI while eliminating workers, to Jeff Bezos’ Washington Post losing $100 million - the economic cracks are widening fast. This video breaks down the real economy in 2026: mass layoffs at auto parts manufacturers, Ford battery plant shutdowns, restaurant bankruptcies, warehouse conversions, and the dangerous shift toward “lean operations” across every industry. If you want the truth about inflation, job losses, corporate downsizing, and where the economy is heading next, this is a must-watch. Subscribe to iAllegedly for daily economic news and updates they aren’t telling you."
Comments here:

"War With Iran"

Dialogue Works, 2/28/26
"Mohammad Marandi, Stanislav Krapivnik & Ray McGovern: 
US & Israel Strike Iran, Iran Fires Back"
Comments here:
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Dialogue Works, 2/28/26
"Larry C. Johnson: Massive Iranian Retaliation
 Hits Back Hard After US Attack - Everything Ignited!"
Comments here:
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Full screen recommended.
Times Of India, 2/28/26
"Iran’s Salvos Rip Open U.S. Air Defense Umbrella; 
After Iron Domes, American Defense Shield ‘Smashed’"
"Tensions surge across the Middle East after Iran launched a major retaliatory strike targeting U.S. military assets in the Gulf. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps claimed it destroyed an American early warning radar system in Qatar and struck the command of the United States 5th Fleet in Bahrain. Explosions and smoke were reported over Doha and Abu Dhabi as regional defenses responded. Iran said the operation, dubbed “Truthful Promise 4,” also targeted sites in the United Arab Emirates and Israel."
Comments here:

"New Iran War!"

"Scott Ritter On New Iran War!"
Comments here:
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Glenn Diesen, 2/28/26
"Scott Ritter: 
Full-Scale War as Iran Attacks All U.S. Targets"
Comments here:
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Col. Douglas Macgregor, 2/28/26
"This War Could Crush America"
Comments here:
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Glenn Diesen, 2/28/26
"Seyed M. Marandi: 
Israel & U.S. Launch Surprise Attack on Iran"
"Iran is under attack in what will likely be a massive regional war that cannot be contained. Seyed Mohammad Marandi is a professor at Tehran University and a former advisor to Iran's Nuclear Negotiation Team."
Comments here:

"LIVE STREAM: US And Israel Attack Iran"

Full screen recommended.
Agenda Free TV, 2/27/26
"LIVE STREAM: US And Israel Attack Iran"
Comments here:
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Full screen recommended.
" Live Telecast: Israel Launches Preemptive Strikes On Iran 
Comments here:
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Aljazeera, 2/28/26
Live stream video at link above.

Friday, February 27, 2026

Jeremiah Babe, "Warning! Ominous Times Ahead!"

Jeremiah Babe, 2/27/26
"Warning! Ominous Times Ahead!"
Comments here:

"Massive Food Recalls Affecting Walmart, Costco, & Others!"

Adventures With Danno, 2/27/26
"Massive Food Recalls Affecting
 Walmart, Costco, & Others!"
Comments here:

"80 Millions Jobs Will Be Wiped Out By The Worst Labor Market Crisis In Our Lifetime"

Full screen recommended.
Epic Economist, 2/27/26
"80 Millions Jobs Will Be Wiped Out By 
The Worst Labor Market Crisis In Our Lifetime"

"America isn't ready for what AI is about to do to the job market. In this video, we break down the real stories and predictions that are circulating right now about how artificial intelligence is expected to eliminate up to 80 million jobs in the next 12 to 18 months. This is happening right now, and most people are not paying attention.

From Microsoft's AI CEO predicting that most white collar tasks will be fully automated in the near future, to Andrew Yang warning that 20 to 50 million office jobs could disappear in the next few years, the signals are everywhere. Major tech companies are already cutting thousands of positions while posting record profits. And the people being let go aren't just entry level workers. They're mid-career professionals, software engineers, lawyers, accountants, marketers, designers, and customer service workers who spent years building careers that are now being replaced by algorithms.

What makes this moment so different from past technological shifts is the speed. During the Industrial Revolution, workers who lost their jobs to machines could at least operate those machines. But with AI, the technology doesn't just do the work. It manages itself, improves itself, and costs almost nothing compared to a human employee. That changes the equation entirely. Companies no longer need your experience or your loyalty. They need efficiency. And AI delivers that without asking for a paycheck, benefits, or time off.

We're already seeing the impact on everyday people. Some have been out of work for over a year with no prospects in sight. Others are being asked to train the very AI systems that are replacing them just to make ends meet. Copywriters, customer service reps, and creative professionals are watching their industries transform overnight. And the ripple effects go far beyond the individual. When millions of people lose their income, local businesses suffer, communities shrink, and the broader economy takes a serious hit.

But it's not all doom and gloom. There is a growing conversation about what still makes humans valuable in this new landscape. Taste, judgment, creativity, and the ability to understand what resonates with real people are skills that AI hasn't mastered yet. The workers who are learning to adapt, building new skill sets, and figuring out how to use AI as a tool rather than compete against it are the ones most likely to come out ahead.

This video features real voices from people across the country sharing their experiences, fears, and insights about the AI job crisis. Whether you're currently employed, job searching, or just trying to figure out what comes next, this is a conversation that affects all of us. Now is the time to pay attention, start preparing, and have honest conversations about the future of work in America."
Comments here:

Musical Interlude: Walter Murphy, "A Fifth of Beethoven"

Walter Murphy, "A Fifth of Beethoven"

"A Look to the Heavens"

"These cosmic clouds have blossomed 1,300 light-years away, in the fertile starfields of the constellation Cepheus. Called the Iris Nebula, NGC 7023 is not the only nebula to evoke the imagery of flowers. Still, this deep telescopic image shows off the Iris Nebula's range of colors and symmetries, embedded in surrounding fields of interstellar dust. 
Within the Iris itself, dusty nebular material surrounds a hot, young star. The dominant color of the brighter reflection nebula is blue, characteristic of dust grains reflecting starlight. Central filaments of the reflection nebula glow with a faint reddish photoluminesence as some dust grains effectively convert the star's invisible ultraviolet radiation to visible red light. Infrared observations indicate that this nebula contains complex carbon molecules known as PAHs. The dusty blue petals of the Iris Nebula span about six light-years."

"To Really Ask..."

“Very few beings really seek knowledge in this world – few really ask. On the contrary, they try to wring from the unknown the answers they have already shaped in their own minds – justifications, confirmations, forms of consolation without which they can’t go on. To really ask is to open the door to a whirlwind. The answer may annihilate the question and the questioner.”
- Anne Rice, “The Vampire Lestat”

"The Curse of Interesting Times"

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

If we believe Strauss-Howe Generational Theory, we are in the midst of what they call a Fourth Turning - a moment of Crisis.

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

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

“Of Time, Turnings, Stars & Wars”

“Of Time, Turnings, Stars & Wars”
by Doug "Uncola" Lynn

"Like nature, history is full of processes that cannot happen in reverse. Just as the laws of entropy do not allow a bird to fly backward, or droplets to regroup at the top of a waterfall, history has no rewind button. Like the seasons of nature, it moves only forward."
- Strauss and Howe: “The Fourth Turning”

"Contemplating the concept of time can be quite confounding, to say the least. In the extreme, considering the paradoxical nature of time’s passage will stretch the mind causing thoughts to invert like taffy in a rolling machine or light yielding to the gravity of an Event Horizon before the edge of a Black Hole in deep space.

Knowing Einstein was right means time stops at the speed of light. Surely then, waves of thought must generate their own specific gravity to capture both light and sound, together. Our eyes and ears record each moment and translate events into high definition digital memories which we can recall upon demand and view as celluloid film stock in a dark room.

However, in this dimension, there is another aspect at play that comes attached to time. Space: The final frontier. These conflagrate together and then separate at any given moment never to coalesce again in quite the same way. Time can be recalled like a ghost, or a spectral hologram, on the mind’s screen, but the space will have changed and dissipated entropically like dust digested in the amorphous bellies of Stephen King’s Langoliers.

To put it another way, time changes everything. A couple of years ago one of my offspring had a milestone birthday so we went to a morning movie matinee followed by an expensive late lunch at a fine dining venue. It was there where I chewed my food and contemplated the confounding conceptual continuations of space and time.

The movie was the Star Wars flick, "Rogue One" and the state-of-the-art theater featured stadium seating and a massive UltraScreen Deluxe® with Dolby® Atmospheric Surround-sound which, according to the advertisements, offered the “ultimate moviegoing experience”. As I watched the story unfold in REAL D 3D® with my 3D glasses in place while eating my popcorn and nestled comfortably in the red leather DreamLoungerTM recliner, I thought to myself how I really am in the future. In the lobby after the movie, I checked Drudge on my smartphone and learned Carrie Fisher had died in Los Angeles.

This made me remember way back to my past when I was a preteen and first saw the original Star Wars. I watched it with several friends in an ornately vintage, and solitary, theater in my small town. Through the patina of time and the opaque looking glass of my mind’s eye, I remember hoping no one would tell my parents, or my orthodontist, that I was eating popcorn and lemon drops with new braces on my teeth. Although I was an avid reader back then with a keen appreciation for science fiction, I had not seen a film before that captivated me like the first Star Wars. The excellent storyline, superior special effects, and the characters in the film really made an impression on me.

If my current self could go back to that day, I would meet the geeky, metal-mouthed kid after the movie and tell him some things. I would also mention how, in 43 years, he will celebrate his progeny’s birthday who, at that time, will be several years older than he is now and how he will be seeing another Star Wars movie on the very same day that Princess Leia died in real life.

The ironic confluence of time and space, indeed.

I am sure the mini-me at that time would have pegged me as a brain-damaged old fool and, in turn, would have attempted to persuade me into buying him and his friends a six-pack of beer, a fifth of peppermint Schnapps, a Playboy and a can of chew. After all, according to "The Fourth Turning," by Strauss and Howe, the year 1977 was two and a half “Turnings” ago. Back then, the future wasn’t set. Or was it?

“We perceive our civic challenge as some vast, insoluble Rubik’s Cube. Behind each problem lies another problem that must be solved first, and behind that lies yet another, and another, ad infinitum. To fix crime we have to fix the family, but before we do that we have to fix welfare, and that means fixing our budget, and that means fixing our civic spirit, but we can’t do that without fixing moral standards, and that means fixing schools and churches, and that means fixing the inner cities, and that’s impossible unless we fix crime. There’s no fulcrum on which to rest a policy lever. People of all ages sense that something huge will have to sweep across America before the gloom can be lifted – but that’s an awareness we suppress. As a nation, we’re in deep denial.”
- Strauss and Howe, “The Fourth Turning”

Written by the historians William Strauss and Neil Howe, “The Fourth Turning” was published in 1997 and was, at that time, boldly proclaimed by the authors to be an “American Prophecy”. The book is fascinating in that it very thoroughly documents recorded cycles of history across multiple cultures and eras in order to predict the timing of “America’s next rendezvous with destiny”.

Processing almost like a Cliff’s Notes summary, the book identifies the timelines of historical events and matches them to specific life cycles of people in the form of generational archetypes. What is also interesting is how Strauss and Howe quantify and compare the recordings of history of multiple authors throughout the millennia to find uncanny comparisons in both historical and generational cycles.  Ironically, the comparisons stand up not only to the test of time regarding recorded events in history, but the generational turnings and archetypes also translate to ancient literature and other writings as well, ranging from Homer’s Iliad to the Holy Bible.

The concept of time is discussed in the context of both circular and linear perspectives as Strauss and Howe describe what is called the “saeculum”. The saeculum represents a “long human life”, or approximately 80 to 90 years comprising of four turnings each lasting about 20 to 22 years.

Just as there are four seasons consisting of spring, summer, fall and winter, there are also four phases of a human life represented in childhood, young adulthood, middle age and old age, or elderhood. As each phase of human life represents approximately 20 years, so is each generational archetype identified within historical cycles, or turnings, as follows:
Click image for larger size.
The generational archetypes experience the historical turnings according their life stage, or age. Amazingly, history shows a consistent pattern in how the generations both cause and affect historical events.  The patterns develop based upon how each generation interacts with the other and this also has documented consistencies that are delineated by the authors.

At any given “turning” during the saeculum, the set order of the generations on the age ladder is called a “constellation”. For example, during the Fourth Turning Crisis of 1929 through 1945, America experienced a financial crash, a great depression and a world war. During this period, the Prophet generation was entering Elderhood, the Nomad generation were middle-aged and the Hero generation fought WW II as young adults while the Artist generation were children during that time.

When the Crisis (Winter) era of financial hardship and war was over, the Spring of another First Turning began as the Hero generation led America into a season of unparalleled prosperity from 1946 through President John F. Kennedy’s assassination in 1963. It was then the baby boomer, Prophet, generation began. As young adults, the boomers began to rock the nation with new age flower-power, feminism, guitars and free love. Thus began the Awakening that lasted through Ronald Reagan’s first term that ended in 1984. It was then the Third Turning of the Unraveling began.

In 1997, when the Fourth Turning was published, Strauss and Howe used their generational model to predict with remarkable accuracy, the start of the next Crisis in 2005: “By the middle Oh-Ohs, institutions will reach a point of maximum weakness, individualism of maximum strength, and even the simplest public task will feel beyond the ability of government. As niche walls rise ever higher, people will complain endlessly how bad all of the niches are. Wide chasms will separate rich from poor, whites from blacks, immigrants from native borns, seculars from born agains, technophiles from technophobes. America will feel more tribal. Indeed, many will be asking whether fifty states and so many dozens of ethic cultures make sense any more as a nation – and, if they do, whether that nation has a future.”
- Strauss and Howe:  “The Fourth Turning”

In 1997 there was no way to foresee the sequencing of 911, the Patriot Act, Edward Snowden, government incompetence after Hurricane Katrina, the financial crisis of 2007 – 2008, the subsequent TARP bailouts or the election of a mysterious, biracial pied piper to the presidency of the United States.

There is no way anyone could have predicted the ensuing eight years of Obama, the nationalization of healthcare, the orgy of greed hosted by Wall Street at the expense of Main Street, endless wars, unchecked immigration, the TSA, NSA, Homeland Security, the CIA versus the FBI, smart phones, drones, religious discriminations, Occupy Wall Street, the Tea Party, the Alt-right, Black Lives Matter and fake news.

Given the accuracy and timing of Strauss and Howe’s predictions, perhaps there is real validity behind their generational theory after all. And, given this, then we are now within the Winter of a Fourth Turning Crisis.

Can you feel it in the air? High powers in dark places are gathering and sides are being chosen as potential treachery and intrigue lurk around every corner. A global empire stands prepared to battle with populist movements and sovereign nations across the globe while rumors of a neo American civil war abound here at home.

Captured corporate media propaganda outlets and deep state government agencies relentlessly shill for a global empire and stoke the fires of war against a free alternative media while simultaneously provoking a nuclear armed Russia.

Half of the nation’s electorate, on the brink of a financial abyss, would rather kneel before an evil empire than to support the outcome of a free election. Of course, there is no unity in America today. Those days are long gone.

“People young and old will puzzle over what it felt like for their parents and grandparents, in a distantly remembered era, to have lived in a society that felt like one national community. They will yearn to recreate this, to put America back together again. But no one will know how.”
- Strauss and Howe, “The Fourth Turning”

Winter is here.  War is coming. Battles will be waged and conflicts will rage. There will be no escape for what is coming and no guarantee as to any outcome, save one: After this Fourth Turning, there will remain only liberty or tyranny. One, but not the other. For this will be a fight unto the death.

Even so, do many Nomads now entering middle-age, and their Hero generation progeniture, actually understand what is about to befall them? Do they even care? And, for those who do understand and do care; do they know how to fight?

Truly, there are many variables to this historical cycle that were absent in the all of the previous Fourth Turnings throughout history. A few examples would include pervasive and devastating technology with the capabilities of either enslaving, or killing, entire generations of people; a global corporatocracy in control of government agencies, mass flows of information, food and resources; entirely misinformed and apathetic populations with no moral bearing, belief system, or willingness to accept truth in order to stand strong against the dark powers now encroaching; and, finally, there are so many who have been trained to embrace the utopian lie of one world under tyranny. Sadly, many of these may be the new Stormtroopers in waiting.

In the end, we must choose. And not choosing, by default, is a choice. Can a rag tag federation of freedom fighters with truth, liberty and history on their side under a flag of 13 stripes and 50 stars, with idea-fueled keyboards, a compromised internet, and semi-automatic weapons prevail against a galactic empire in control of a technocracy more powerful than any fictional Death Star?

We’re about to find out. Everything that has ever happened before has delivered us to where we are now. Hold on to that. Even more importantly, don’t forget to fasten your seatbelts and place your trays in the upright and locked position.The warp drive is about to be engaged. A new journey has begun."
"May the Force be with you."

"INTEL Roundtable w/Johnson & McGovern - Week of 27 Feb."

Judge Napolitano - Judging Freedom, 2/27/26
"INTEL Roundtable w/Johnson & McGovern - 
Week of 27 Feb."
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Dialogue Works, 2/27/26
"Martin Armstrong: How World War III Begins - 
And Why It’s Happening Now"
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The Daily "Near You?"

Barnsley, United Kingdom. Thanks for stopping by!

"Life Will Break You"

“Life will break you. Nobody can protect you from that, and living alone won’t either, for solitude will also break you with its yearning. You have to love. You have to feel. It is the reason you are here on earth. You are here to risk your heart. You are here to be swallowed up. And when it happens that you are broken, or betrayed, or left, or hurt, or death brushes near, let yourself sit by an apple tree and listen to the apples falling all around you in heaps, wasting their sweetness. Tell yourself you tasted as many as you could.”
- Louise Erdrich

"10 Big Box Retailers Facing A Financial Collapse Right Now"

Full screen recommended.
Across The States, 2/27/26
"10 Big Box Retailers Facing 
A Financial Collapse Right Now"
"Think the stores you grew up with are too big to disappear? Look closer. The dark windows aren’t random - they’re signals. In this video, we break down 10 major retail bankruptcies - from appliance chains to dollar stores - and show how they all point to the same underlying economic pressure. This isn’t just about Amazon or bad management. It’s about rising operating costs colliding with shrinking consumer spending power."
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"The American Economy is Crashing and Everyone Knows It"

Full screen recommended.
A Homestead Journey, 2/27/26
"The American Economy is Crashing 
and Everyone Knows It"
"The American economy is crashing, and everyone sees it happening in real time. Families across America are struggling under the weight of inflation, the cost of living crisis, skyrocketing rent, and rising food costs. Wages can’t keep up, debt is exploding, and millions are realizing the so-called “strong economy” was nothing more than smoke and mirrors. From mass layoffs to hiring freezes, from maxed-out credit cards to mortgage defaults, the cracks in America’s financial system are impossible to ignore. Ordinary Americans are watching their savings disappear, their bills skyrocket, and their ability to simply survive collapse before their eyes. This isn’t just another downturn - it’s the unraveling of the American dream. In this video, we’ll dive into why the economy is collapsing, why Americans everywhere are waking up to the truth, and how you can prepare for what’s coming next."
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