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Monday, March 2, 2026

The Poet: J.R.R. Tolkien, "I Sit And Think"

"I Sit And Think"

“I sit beside the fire and think
Of all that I have seen,
Of meadow flowers and butterflies
In summers that have been.
Of yellow leaves and gossamer
In autumns that there were,
With morning mist and silver sun
And wind upon my hair.

I sit beside the fire and think
Of how the world will be
When winter comes without a spring
That I shall ever see.
For still there are so many things
That I have never seen,
In every wood, in every spring,
There is a different green.

I sit beside the fire and think
Of people long ago,
And people that will see a world
That I shall never know.
But all the while I sit and think
Of times there were before,
I listen for returning feet
And voices at the door.”

- J.R.R. Tolkien

The Universe; "Reality..."

"Life is not what you see, but what you've projected.
It's not what you've felt, but what you've decided.
It's not what you've experienced, but how you've remembered it.
It's not what you've forged, but what you've allowed.
And it's not who's appeared, but who you've summoned.
And this should serve you well until you find what you already have."
- The Universe

"Reality is what we take to be true.
What we take to be true is what we believe.
What we believe is based upon our perceptions.
What we perceive depends upon what we look for.
What we look for depends upon what we think.
What we think depends upon what we perceive.
What we perceive determines what we believe.
What we believe determines what we take to be true.
What we take to be true is our reality."
- Gary Zukav

"There Are Simply No Answers..."

“How is one to live a moral and compassionate existence when one is fully aware of the blood, the horror inherent in life, when one finds darkness not only in one’s culture but within oneself? If there is a stage at which an individual life becomes truly adult, it must be when one grasps the irony in its unfolding and accepts responsibility for a life lived in the midst of such paradox. One must live in the middle of contradiction, because if all contradiction were eliminated at once life would collapse. There are simply no answers to some of the great pressing questions. You continue to live them out, making your life a worthy expression of leaning into the light.”
- Barry Lopez

Prepper News, "Alert! US Troops In Iran?! ARAMCO In Flames! France Deploys Nukes!"

Prepper News, 3/2/26
"Alert! US Troops In Iran?! ARAMCO In Flames! 
France Deploys Nukes!"
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" Iran-Israel-U.S. War"

Full screen recommended.
"All Hell Breaks Loose As 10 US Fighter Jets 
Downed Over Iran; Netanyahu Goes Missing"
by OPTM
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Full screen recommended.
Money Over History, 3/2/26
"Iran’s Strike on Netanyahu: Is He Alive or Not?"
"Iran has claimed a major missile strike targeting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office - but is he alive? In this in-depth breakdown, we analyze what really happened, what has been confirmed, and what this means for Israel, Iran, and the entire Middle East. Ballistic missiles, rising oil prices, Gulf security fears, and global power tensions - this situation is bigger than just one strike. We examine the military strategy, possible retaliation scenarios, U.S. involvement, and how this could impact global markets and regional stability. Is this the start of a larger regional war? Or a calculated escalation designed to shift power in the Middle East? Watch till the end for a full geopolitical breakdown of what could happen next."
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o
Full screen recommended.
TimesXP, 3/2/26
"Israel’s Netanyahu Killed In Iran's 'Surprise Missile Attack’? Iran-Israel-U.S. War"
"Is Netanyahu dead? What’s really happening as tensions explode across the Middle East?
In this live update video, we break down the latest developments in the Iran-Israel-U.S. conflict."
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Full screen recommended.
Davis Carter Show, 3/2/26
“This Is Getting Worse” - Trump Issues 
Grim Warning as War Spins Out of Control!"
"Donald Trump giving a very bleak warning that we should prepare for a very long war against Iran with undefined objectives and where many more service members will die since, according to Trump, that’s just “the way it is,"
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The Daily "Near You?"

Pearland, Texas, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"Pick and Choose Your Own Truth"

"Pick and Choose Your Own Truth"
by Todd Hayen

"Here I go again. Getting perplexed by the sheep-types in my life. I seem to be in a constant state of cognitive dissonance. I’ve whacked my forehead so many times with the heel of my hand that I am surprised I have not seriously damaged my brain. Well, maybe I have!

It’s really crazy to me, how something can come forth that makes a point we have all made in the past into an incontrovertible truth, and these sheepsters will still not see it. I just got around to watching Mikki Willis’ "Follow the Silenced," and after getting 20 minutes into it, I said, “What could be better evidence of the truth that these vaccines were bad news?” I shared this with someone close, who is, believe it or not, a sheep, and they said, “That just isn’t true.”

What? They were quite casual about it, too. Like there wasn’t anything to argue about. It would be the same as if I showed them a movie of a human walking around with a rat’s head. They wouldn’t be freaked out wondering if it might be true; they would just know it wasn’t. No question. No second thoughts. “That just isn’t true.” Of course, this is different than a rat-headed human (although with AI these days it would be an easy “untruth” to pull off). I am talking about things that are facts, no question, clear and simple. Facts.

Sure, Willis’ film probably isn’t 100% factual. Or at least, what IS factual doesn’t necessarily prove it is widespread. But much of what is presented is factual. And the argument that what Willis is presenting is all play-acting just doesn’t cut it. Sure, that happens too, but there are times when that sort of manipulation is plausible. Willis’ film is not one of them.

And since when does something presented have to be 100% factual for it to be considered? We used to live in a time where we determined what was worth paying attention to by assessing its relevance, the percentage of accurate information compared to the whole, and the context of what was presented. Now, any idea at all must meet the “100%” test. This reminds me of the fact check that stated Paul Revere’s ride, where he is shouting “The British are coming, the British are coming!” was not a fact, because not ALL of the British Empire was invading the country, only a small military faction. So, the whole statement then is deemed incorrect. This is standard “fact-checking” on social media, and it is insane.

Still, there are many other examples of this demonstration of picking what you choose to believe. And there is something psychologically weird about how people respond to this stuff. So, what else is new? We truly have entered into a time where people are truly whacked. And I’m a psychotherapist! You can’t find this stuff in a textbook.

Take the whole climate change debacle, for instance. I’m not here to debate whether the planet’s getting hotter or if it’s all a cosmic prank - though I’ve got my suspicions about the latter. But watch how the sheep latch onto “their truth” like it’s the last lifeboat on the Titanic. On one side, you’ve got folks who swallow every alarmist headline hook, line, and sinker: polar bears drowning, cities underwater by next Tuesday, all because we dared to drive SUVs and eat steak.

Show them data suggesting natural cycles, solar flares, or even historical warm periods like the Medieval Warm Period (when Vikings were farming Greenland, for crying out loud), and they glaze over. “That’s denialism,” they say, as if the word itself is a magical shield against inconvenient facts. Why? Because it fits the narrative they’ve been fed - the one that makes them feel virtuous for recycling their plastic straws while ignoring the private jets of the elites preaching the gospel.

Flip the coin, and you’ve got the other crowd, convinced it’s all a hoax cooked up by globalists to slap carbon taxes on the little guy. Present them with satellite images of melting ice caps or rising sea levels, and they wave it away as manipulated data or “weather, not climate.” Both sides dig in their heels, not because the evidence is lacking, but because admitting the other side might have a sliver of validity would shatter their worldview. It’s tribalism on steroids, where “my truth” isn’t about seeking reality - it’s about belonging to the right club. Psychologically, this stems from confirmation bias, that sneaky brain trick where we cherry-pick info that strokes our ego and ignore the rest. Add in a dash of fear - fear of change, fear of being wrong, fear of the unknown - and voilà, you’ve got a recipe for intellectual stagnation.

Another prime example hits closer to home for me as a therapist: the mental health industry’s love affair with pharmaceuticals. I’ve seen clients come in, desperate for relief from anxiety or depression, and the first thing their doctor does is scribble a script for SSRIs like they’re handing out candy. Never mind the black box warnings, the withdrawal horror stories, or studies showing placebos work just as well in many cases. Show a sheep-type patient footage of people recounting their nightmare experiences - zombie-like side effects, suicidal thoughts, the works - and they’ll shrug it off.

“My doctor says it’s safe,” they insist, as if the white coat confers infallibility. Why do they cling to this? It’s easier. Popping a pill absolves them of the hard work: therapy, lifestyle changes, digging into root causes like trauma or diet. It’s the illusion of control in a chaotic world, wrapped in the comfort of authority. Question that authority, and suddenly you’re the crazy one, labelled an “anti-vaxxer” equivalent for mental health. But facts are facts: the overprescription epidemic is real, backed by whistleblowers and buried FDA reports. Yet, “their truth” prevails because facing the alternative means admitting the system might be broken - and who wants that headache?

Or consider the origins of COVID itself. Lab leak theory was once “conspiracy nonsense,” ridiculed by fact-checkers and banned on social media. Now? Even the FBI and DOE lean toward it, with emails showing scientists privately admitting it while publicly denying. But try telling that to the die-hards who still parrot “wet market” like it’s gospel. Why? Emotional investment. If it were a lab leak, funded by our own tax dollars no less, it would implicate heroes like Fauci and shake our faith in science. Easier to dismiss whistleblowers as cranks than confront the betrayal. This isn’t new; history’s littered with it - think Tuskegee experiments or MKUltra. People pick “their truth” to preserve sanity, avoiding the abyss of realizing power structures lie.

At its core, this “pick and choose” phenomenon signals a deeper malaise: the death of objective reality. We’ve traded shared facts for personalized bubbles, curated by algorithms and echo chambers. Why? Technology plays a part, sure - endless scrolling reinforces biases. But psychologically, it’s about vulnerability. In an uncertain world, clinging to “my truth” offers certainty, even if illusory. It’s a defence mechanism against overwhelm, a way to simplify complexity. As a therapist, I see it daily: clients rewriting personal histories to avoid pain, ignoring red flags in relationships because “love conquers all.” Scale that up societally, and you get mass delusion.

Yet, here’s the rub - and maybe a sliver of hope. If everyone’s got “their truth,” then mine’s as valid as any. So why not question everything? Peel back the layers, demand evidence, and risk being the odd one out. It’s exhausting, sure, but it beats forehead-smacking frustration. In the end, truth isn’t a buffet; it’s a hunt. And if we all stopped grazing like sheep and started tracking like shrews, we might just uncover something real. Wouldn’t that be a plot twist worth waking up for?"
Todd Hayen PhD is a registered psychotherapist practicing in To
ronto, Ontario, Canada. He holds a PhD in depth psychotherapy and an MA in Consciousness Studies. He specializes in Jungian, archetypal, psychology. Todd also writes for his own substack, which you can read here.

"How Our Society Started Worshipping Idiots - Socrates"

Full screen recommended.
"How Our Society Started Worshipping Idiots - Socrates"
by The Psyche
"We live in an era where noise is mistaken for wisdom and popularity for truth. But how did we get here - to a world that celebrates ignorance and mocks intelligence? In this powerful video inspired by the philosophy of Socrates, we explore how modern society has begun to worship superficiality over substance, and why thinkers, truth-seekers, and critical minds are increasingly silenced. From the digital age to the age of the Sophists, this reflection uncovers how our craving for attention has replaced our pursuit of understanding.

Discover what Socrates, Carl Jung, and Nietzsche can teach us about the illusion of knowledge, the manipulation of truth, and the psychological forces that make the masses follow fools instead of the wise. More importantly, learn how you can reclaim your ability to think freely in a culture that rewards conformity. If you crave deep, thought-provoking content about philosophy, psychology, and the human mind - this video will awaken something within you."
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"The Only Way To Keep One's Sanity..."

"It was the essence of life to disbelieve in death for one's self, to act as if life would continue forever. And life had to act also as if little issues were big ones. To take a realistic attitude toward life and death meant that one lapsed into unreality. Into insanity. It was ironic that the only way to keep one's sanity was to ignore that one was in an insane world or to act as if the world were sane."
- Philip José Farmer

"How To Break A Society, Part II: Destroy The Family"

"How To Break A Society, Part II: 
Destroy The Family"
by John Wilder

"Picture this: A young guy finishes high school, gets a factory job paying enough for a house, a car, and a stay-at-home wife. They pop out 2.5 kids (the .5 is for Kevin, who isn’t too bright). They go to church on Sunday, and the kids argue about whose turn it is to mow the lawn. There is no prenup, no Tinder® swipes, no OnlyFans™ side hustle and no Facebook™ telling the wife that every other woman has it better. Just stability. Boring? No. Enriching. But this isn’t 2026, it’s the standard from 1956 before the rot set in.

Today: That same guy’s grandkid is 28, drowning in student debt for that degree she got in the Ethnography of Colonialism and its impact on Basket Weaving techniques of Amazonian tribes. She’s living in a pod with five roommates, and swiping right on profiles of 6’2”, six figure Chads, trading her youth to chase a fleeting thrill. Marriage? Ha! She’s living her “best life” on a carousel of dates with men that would never marry her, but sure would give her horizontal attention for an evening. Kids? Such a constraint!

The idea is simple: everything is made of atoms, and those atoms are the smallest piece that makes up whatever it is we’re looking at. At the core of any society is an atom, too. This isn’t the proton-neutron-electron kind. No, this is the atom of society, the family, a Dad, a Mom, and kids. Throughout all of recorded history, societies that crank out the next generation survive. The ones that don’t? They end up as footnotes in dusty history books.

The most stable setup? Dad in charge, Mom raising the rugrats, everyone pulling in the same direction. Young men get wives, which calms their inner caveman urges. Kids give them purpose beyond leveling up in Call of Duty®.

A society of married dads with skin in the game? They build. They invest. They don’t riot over pronouns. This setup is so rock-solid it’s baked into every enduring culture from Rome to the Amish. It’s also morally encoded. It’s True, Beautiful, and Good. The Bible talks about this from the earliest through the latest books, with not a single mention of gay marriage being stunning and brave.

But since the late 1800s, there’s been a full-court press to dismantle the family. Why? Because stable families are hard to control. Families don’t need government handouts or therapy apps because they self-regulate. Enter the wrecking crew.

First? Women voting. It sounds innocent and there’s a broad consensus in the United States that it’s a good thing.

“Equality!” the women yelled. But it fails for a simple reason. It’s based upon the concept that society’s basic unit isn’t the family, instead it’s the individual. Individuals don’t reproduce; families do. An island of just women in a few decades will produce an island where no one lives at all, and when the last two women die it’s nearly certain they wouldn’t have talked to each other in years.

I’ve said it before: if I was in charge, I’d restrict voting to folks with stake in the future. How about married men who are net taxpayers, wed to women under 35. This would produce serious elections with no pandering to cat ladies or trust-fund socialists. You could make the argument that married women vote rationally because, “Hey, low taxes mean more for the kids.” But unmarried women? They lean heavily toward anti-family voting, like funding endless welfare that rewards single moms over intact homes, endless immigration because refugees are like the children they didn’t have that they didn’t care for.

Continuing our trip back in history, hand-in-hand with suffrage came the push for contraception. The big push for legalization kicked off around 1914, right alongside the suffragettes. Perhaps the reason that these old battle axes were in favor of contraception was because if sex meant that a man had the chance of being chained to one of them, they’d never get laid. Look at old photos of those gals, they were coyotes-ugly in corsets.

Regardless, the goal was decoupling sex from consequences. Fun? Sure. But families? Optional now. The Four Horsemen of the Family-pocalypse were galloping at around this time. They consisted of: Women’s voting, spiritualism (because nothing says “stable society” like séances with your dead aunt), contraception, and free love.

All of these are profoundly anti-family. The roots for these movements are as far away from True, Beautiful, and Good as you can get: they were ugly, communist, and family-hating. A generation after the 19th Amendment, Planned Parenthood® rebranded. Their pitch? Legal abortion and, later, the Pill. No kids? No family. Sex is all about fun.

Then Roe v. Wade in 1973 led to abortion on demand. “My body, my choice,” except the body inside isn’t yours, but hey, logic is optional in revolutions. The result? Millions of potential families and children vaporized before they started.

Add in the other sacrament of Evil: no-fault divorce. Marriage used to mean something and was difficult to get out of. Now? “Irreconcilable differences” means that divorces are on the menu. In marriages with college-educated women, over 90% are initiated by the woman. Why? “I’m unhaaaaappy. Pay me.” Disposable vows means meaningless commitment. Families shatter like dropped PEZ® dispensers.

And the cherry on top? Gay marriage. French historian Emmanuel Todd (link to my Todd post here) called this the final shark-jump for Western society. It redefines marriage from a “procreation unit” to a “feel-good contract.” Society’s now officially anti-family. Proof? Heritage Americans’ birthrate dipped below replacement. In 55 years, we went from a tight-knit nation of shared blood, faith, and language to a balkanized mess where the only glue is “we all breathe oxygen . . . mostly.”

Media’s been the propaganda arm on steroids for this anti-family movement. Hollywood has been anti-family at least since Archie Bunker first stepped on stage. Now? Every script’s a checklist:

• All bad guys: White, straight heritage Americans.
• Women: Kick butt like Rambo, but in heels. Physics? Who needs that?
• Dads: Bumbling idiots who can’t tie their shoes without Mom’s help.
• Moms: Boss queens running the show, because empowerment.
• Kids: Precocious sexualized objects wiser than adults.
• Traditional values: Mocked as uncool, if shown at all. Religion is shown only to show how evil it is. Children of the Corn, anyone?

It’s like Hollywood hired the Antichrist as script consultant and he became a network executive. Peak America was built on strong families. Now? We’re force-fed “Modern Family®” as the new normal, where Dad is optional and kids are accessories. None of this was accidental and every bit of it was engineered. The GloboLeftElite saw stable families as roadblocks. Families teach self-reliance, morality, and “no, you can’t have everything.”

Government wants dependence: “We’ll be your family, citizen. Just vote blue and hand over your paycheck.” They splintered us with migration, welfare that punished marriage, schools that indoctrinate instead of educate, and a culture that celebrates “my truth” over “our future.”

The absurdity? We did this during our peak prosperity where we could have invested our wealth and energy to take us to the stars. We were fat, happy, and gullible. We were perfect marks for the con. “Break the old norms, women, they’re oppressive!” Now we’ve got fatherless homes breeding crime waves, women wondering where the good men went, and a birthrate that screams extinction event. A society without families is a house of cards in a hurricane.

Young men without purpose? They don’t create since there’s no reason to. Women without kids? They adopt causes or cats. Kids without dads? Statistics waiting to happen. The bill? As I said before, it’s coming due, with interest."

"How It Really Is"

"The Last King of Persia"

"The Last King of Persia"
by Radio Far Side

"Welp, Israelusa have gone and stepped in it again. I picture a couple of kids stomping around in cow pies and wondering why they always smell like shit. Suppose Evil Bastard A and Evil Bastard B started dropping bombs on the US on Christmas Day for no apparent reason, killing a bunch of schoolgirls and, oh I don’t know, Joel Osteen. Or suppose someone sneezed at the Wailing Wall during Hannukah giving some saintly rabbi (if such a thing exists) a head cold. Do you think the people would rise up and overthrow their governments?Or would they rally ‘round the flag and sing Kumbaya?

The vile attack on a country that hasn’t done anything overtly violent since its war with Iraq in the 1980s - and even that was predicated on a full-scale invasion by Iraq - is reprehensible. It cannot be blamed on Hamas, which is a Sunni Muslim organization. Iran is overwhelmingly Shi’a. That’s like attacking Moscow because you blame the Orthodox church for being anti-Vatican. Good grief.

One thing is immediately apparent in all this: the US CONgress is a redundant cowardly lapdog that long ago delegated its authorities and responsibilities, so that it’s little more than a champagne and cigar club with cushy gym. Come the fall, every incumbent up for election should be booted. But that will never happen.

Here’s a little metaphor: your house and family are surrounded by a blood-thirsty mob with pitchforks and torches, ready to attack you at any moment and raze your house to the ground, killing everyone inside. They demand that you throw out all your weapons, turn of the power and alarm system, unlock all your doors and windows, and destroy all your phones and computers. Oh, and you need to let a few of them move in to keep an eye on you. If you do that, they promise they will go away and leave you alone. You look into the faces of your terrified children, kiss your weeping wife for good luck, and start doing exactly as the mob demands. Right? I didn’t think so.

Here’s what’s really going on: Trump is trying to unseat China, the cornerstone of the NeoCon wish list since the 1990s. He wants to unwind the BRICS before his meeting with Xi Jinping at the end of March.

Trump has decapitated Venezuela, which was BRICS-aligned, mostly because he’s too chickenshit to go after Brazil, which is a founding member of BRICS. Now he is trying to decapitate Iran, which is a full member of the BRICS, while at the same time supporting a war in the Ukraine and hijacking oil tankers because Russia is a founding member of the BRICS. He’s also trying to lure India (founding member) away from Russia and China, all so he has a bit of leverage with Xi after severely hampering China’s energy supply. That’s it. That’s why Trump is killing thousands and destroying a sovereign nation.

BeeBee Nuttyahoo is a different story. He just loves killing. Doesn’t matter who, doesn’t matter where, doesn’t matter why. As long as Israel is at war, he figures he won’t be tried for crimes against humanity and profound corruption in his administration(s). Nuttyahoo is just a slimy bastard, not unlike Spain’s Franco in many respects. If he didn’t have Iran, Jordan and Lebanon to wipe off the map, I’d bet dimes to donuts he’d turn on his own people.

I live in a majority-Muslim country that recently became a full member of BRICS and sells coal to China. I have to wonder if the Marines will be at my door in the near future. If the Iran adventure fails, as it is likely to do, I imagine the odds are in favor of invasion here.

As I write, reports are coming out that Ayatollah Khamenei has been killed. Isn’t that wonderful? Trump and Nuttyahoo have slaughtered an 84-year-old cleric to appease their masters. Americans should be very proud. Warped as I am, I get an image of a Monty Python skit of Khamenei being carried out of the ruins on a stretcher, his feeble voice pleading, “I’m not dead yet.”

Something that occurred to me some time back, and with Trump going hog wild with his army toys making impeachment and removal a real possibility (if CONgress finds its bollocks). Suppose the plan all along was for Trump to leave office after the mid-terms. According to the rules, JD Vance would have a shot at 10 years in office, since less than half a term would not constitutionally count against him (see LBJ).

I know, I know - CONgress will never find its bollocks, especially with all the Karens in there, and Trump will never leave office. Just a thought for a soggy monsoon afternoon."

"Si mundus vult dicipi, ergo dicipitatur."

Bill Bonner, "Violence Begets Sell Off"

"Violence Begets Sell Off"
by Bill Bonner

Youghal, Ireland - "Oh my. Another Mideast war. And another assassination...another bombing... giving Donald Trump the distinction of having bombed more countries than any president in US history... and having participated in the murder of seven prominent foreign leaders. As to the pain, we doubt Americans will be totally spared. The Washington Post: "President Donald Trump is gambling that his attack on Iran will not cause Americans serious economic pain in the months before November’s congressional elections.’ But that bet may not pay off.

The Daily Mail: ‘Surging oil prices on the back of Iran strikes threaten to pile more pressure on household budgets…But paying a little more for gasoline is not like getting blown to bits by bombs. So far, Americans have been blessed. They bomb others; others do not bomb them.’

As to the war itself, we presume it will go about as well as America’s other wars of choice. Vietnam and Iraq come readily to mind. Not so much Venezuela. In Venezuela, Maduro had a lot of enemies. Many of them were willing to stab their jefe in the back in return for money and power, offered to them by the CIA.

That is probably not the situation in Iran. The Ayatollah has been martyred. Iran has 90 million people. Many of them are smart. And many of them won’t forget the unprovoked attacks by Israel and the US. They may find ways to get even. That’s the trouble with violence; it often leads to more violence.

All we are sure of is that the US is still on track. It is still a very powerful empire, but so far, all of the major initiatives undertaken this century seem designed to help bring it down. This latest war is no exception.

Bush led off with his preposterous Wars on Terror, Afghanistan and Iraq. The costs were monumental. Strategic benefit? None that we know of. Barack Obama further socialized medical care in the US (nearly 20% of the economy), leading to the biggest increase in health care spending in history. A typical employer-sponsored family insurance plan now costs about $2,000 a month.

In Donald Trump’s first term, he cut taxes - leading to larger deficits. Later, he panicked and shut down the economy for Covid - a colossal mistake. And then, he made it worse by borrowing trillions and sending out ‘stimmie’ checks, which set the stage for the worst inflation in 50 years. Joe Biden followed Trump’s lead with another $1.9 trillion spending bill…and $8 trillion more in debt. And, now in his second term, Trump continues to promote the two things - too much war and too much spending - most often cited as causes for imperial crack-ups.

Oil prices go up and they go down. But federal debt is on a one-way street... and picking up speed. War or no war. CQ News: "Last month, Rep. Stefanik celebrated securing $12.5 million for a tech accelerator in upstate New York that the Pentagon had not requested.

Congress added nearly $34 billion above the president’s fiscal 2026 defense request for more than 1,000 research and procurement programs favored by lawmakers but not necessarily by the military, according to a new report. The $33.97 billion in a fiscal 2026 omnibus spending law (PL119-75) is a dramatic surge in appropriations... By comparison, the fiscal 2024 and 2025 totals for such programs were lower - at $21 billion and $14.95 billion, respectively."

War, however, makes it worse. Naked Capitalism: "After bombing Venezuela, the Trump administration raised its war budget from $1.0 trillion, 47% of discretionary government spending in 2024, to $1.5 trillion! In 2024, the US accounted for over 36% of the world’s military spending of $2.7 trillion! This exceeded the total expenditure of the next nine biggest spenders - China, Russia, Germany, India, UK, Saudi Arabia, Ukraine, France, and Japan! Fortune magazine projects that US spending will exceed that of the next 35 highest-spending countries combined!"

The independent Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget projects federal debt for military spending will increase by $5.8 trillion over the next decade! Where this war is going, we don’t know...but we’re pretty sure we know where the US economy is going. You’re probably not going to like it."

"Judge Napolitano, Judging Freedom, 3/2/26"

Judge Napolitano - Judging Freedom, 3/2/26
"Larry Johnson: 
The Dangerous Fallout of Khamenei’s Murder"
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Judge Napolitano - Judging Freedom, 3/2/26
"Ray McGovern: 
What Happens Next? Iran Situation Explained"
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Judge Napolitano - Judging Freedom, 3/2/26
"Alastair Crooke: 
Trump's Dangerous War of Choice"
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"March 1: Day Two"

"March 1: Day Two"
by No1

"Yesterday, I said overnight would matter more than what happened on Saturday. I wasn’t wrong, but I underestimated the scope. While most of us slept – or tried to – Iran launched what it called the opening phase of “True Promise 4”. Not a single salvo and wait. No, wave after wave after wave, throughout the night and into Sunday morning. By dawn in the Gulf, the IRGC had announced its strikes had entered “a new phase”. By Sunday afternoon they were on communiqué number eight. By evening, they’d deployed cluster warheads over Tel Aviv – a capability nobody had seen before.

The kill list grew. Chief of staff Abdolrahim Mousavi, Defence Minister Aziz Nasirzadeh, IRGC Commander Mohammad Pakpour, and former president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad are all now confirmed or reported dead. CBS intelligence sources put the total at around 40 senior officials. Satellite imagery from Airbus shows Khamenei’s compound levelled – seven missiles hit the residence, killing his daughter, son-in-law, and grandson alongside him.

Iran declared 40 days of national mourning and held his funeral at the University of Tehran on Sunday, formalizing the martyrdom narrative and locking the country into a war footing that now has a theological aspect attached to it.

But why did Khamenei choose this? The IRGC commander-in-chief’s statement was striking – “Khamenei often expressed his eagerness for martyrdom, and achieved his wish at the hands of the most wretched”. I mean, the man was 86. He reportedly insisted on continuing his life normally without sheltering in bunkers. The retaliatory apparatus activated within hours, not days. The succession was seamless. The missiles were already loaded. Whether by design or providence, Khamenei may have served “the cause” more effectively in death than in the last decade of his life.

The regime-change thesis is collapsing in real time. The Council on Foreign Relations quietly noted: “Taking out Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is not the same as regime change. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps is the regime”. Reza Pahlavi – the exiled Shah’s son, living in Maryland for 45 years – went on Fox News to claim he was “leading the transition”, while footage from Tehran showed millions at the funeral.

The Minab school airstrike death toll has risen to 165, mostly girls aged seven to twelve. That atrocity is unifying the country more effectively than any propaganda the regime could manufacture.

And the command chain held. IRGC General Jabbari went on Iranian media Sunday and said they had fired their “old stockpile missiles” so far and would soon “unveil weapons the world has never seen before”. He claimed Iran’s stockpiles were full and the country was prepared to fight for two years. Bluster, maybe. But the operational continuity is not bluster – that part is verified by every wave of missiles that followed the decapitation, eight communiqués deep and climbing. Now to what happened since yesterday.

The Beit Shemesh strike is the headline. An Iranian missile hit a residential area near a synagogue – nine confirmed dead, 23 hospitalised, 11 still missing as of Sunday evening. This is the deadliest single attack on Israeli soil since the operation began. Beit Shemesh is 19 miles west of Jerusalem. That is deep inside Israel, well past the coastal defences, past the Arrow batteries, past everything that was supposed to stop exactly this.

Thirty-five confirmed Iranian strikes on Israeli territory by Saturday evening. That number climbed through Sunday. Tel Aviv took cluster warheads – a new capability, scattering multiple submunitions across the target area and rendering interception enormously harder. At least 40 buildings damaged across the Gush Dan and Kiryat Ono areas. Haifa took direct hits causing what Israeli media called “enormous damage”. Ben Gurion Airport remains closed to all traffic.

The US Embassy in Jerusalem told Americans to shelter in place, announced it was “not in a position at this time to evacuate or directly assist Americans in departing Israel”, and closed its doors for Monday.

Israel has called up 100,000 reservists – you don’t mobilize that many bodies for an air campaign. Either the defensive burden from sustained Iranian strikes is larger than expected, or they’re preparing for ground contingencies that nobody is talking about publicly.

The desalination plants. Reports circulated that Sorek – Israel’s largest desalination facility, supplying roughly 20% of the country’s drinking water – was struck. This is not confirmed by Israeli officials, and Israeli military censorship laws make it nearly impossible to get independent verification of strategic infrastructure hits. But the report comes from multiple sources.

Why this matters beyond the immediate headlines is that Israel operates only five major desalination plants along the Mediterranean coast – Sorek, Sorek B, Ashkelon, Hadera, and Palmachim. Together they supply approximately 80% of Israel’s drinking water. They are, in a very real sense, the only reason Israel functions as a modern state in this semi-arid region. If Iran can reach one, it can reach all five. And that’s the message, whether Sorek was actually struck or not: the target list is existential, not tactical. A country that loses its water supply… It stops existing.

The nuclear question – both directions. In Iran, Bushehr province was struck, but the status of the nuclear power plant itself remains unclear. The IAEA said there was “no evidence of radiological impact” – which is either reassuring or premature, depending on how much you trust early assessments of a facility being bombed in an active war zone.

In the other direction, an Iranian parliamentary national security committee member publicly called for strikes on Israel’s Dimona nuclear reactor “with a two-ton warhead”. Reports from Al-Mayadeen during the 12-day war had already established that Iran was willing to fire hypersonic missiles at the Negev facility. No confirmed hit on Dimona this time. But this is how nuclear taboos erode – one escalation cycle at a time, until someone decides the other side’s reactor is a legitimate target because their reactor was struck first.

No air superiority. This is one I’m watching. Israel announced on Sunday it had dropped more than 1,200 munitions across 24 of Iran’s 31 provinces. The IDF says it’s now striking “deep inside” Tehran, targeting “the heart” of the capital. Israel’s own Channel 12 admitted the US and Israel have not achieved complete air dominance. And the open-source evidence supports that assessment.

What I’m not seeing however are manned aircraft over Iran. The strikes appear to be conducted almost entirely with standoff munitions – Tomahawks from ships, HIMARS, air-launched cruise missiles, ATACMS, and notably “low-cost one-way attack drones of Task Force Scorpion Strike” used in combat for the first time. B-2 bombers flew round trips from Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri – and possibly from Diego Garcia – dropping 2,000-lb bombs on underground missile facilities. Israel claims its Air Force used 200 fighters to conduct “large-scale strikes to establish air superiority and pave the path to Tehran” – but those fighters appear to be launching from outside Iranian airspace, lobbing standoff weapons from safe distance.

If that reading is correct, Iranian air defences – degraded as they probably are – are doing enough to keep manned aircraft at arm’s length. That’s not “winning” in any traditional sense, but it means the heavy penetrating munitions that require aircraft to fly close to its targets – the kind needed to crack Fordow’s mountain or Bushehr’s reactor containment – have not yet been delivered effectively. Iran’s S-300s and Bavar-373s may be battered, but they’re forcing the most expensive military on earth to fight at range. And as Jabbari’s taunt implies, if everything fired so far has been the old inventory, the question isn’t whether Iranian air defence holds – it’s what comes out of storage when they decide to escalate.

Saudi Arabia’s exposure. This one is important and will have consequences long after the missiles stop. CENTCOM inadvertently confirmed – through satellite imagery showing E-11A BACN aircraft operations – that Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia was being used to support strikes on Iran. Riyadh had publicly denied allowing its airspace or bases for the operation. The IRGC noticed. They named Prince Sultan specifically in a subsequent communiqué and struck it. Saudi Arabia then “strongly condemned” Iranian attacks on Gulf states – but the damage is done. The kingdom is now a confirmed participant in an attack on a fellow Muslim-majority nation, regardless of what its diplomats say. Iran will not forget this, and neither will the broader Shia world.

Cyprus. UK Defence Secretary John Healey confirmed that two Iranian missiles were fired “in the direction of Cyprus” – which hosts RAF Akrotiri, a British Sovereign Base Area and key staging ground for regional operations. Healey’s careful phrasing: “We are pretty sure they weren’t targeted at our bases”. The Jerusalem Post reported the missiles were intended to reach Cyprus but fell short and landed in the Mediterranean. Nicosia denied being targeted.

So: Iran fired two intermediate-range ballistic missiles toward the eastern Mediterranean. Whether they were aimed at British bases, meant as a warning shot, or simply fell short of an Israeli-bound trajectory is an open question. What is not an open question is that this is the first time Iranian ballistic missiles have splashed near a NATO member’s territory. Healey also disclosed that 300 British troops in Bahrain had been within “several hundred yards” of Iranian missile impact sites. The UK says it played no part in the strikes. Iran appears unconvinced. The UK is reinforcing Akrotiri with additional fighter jets, and France is now repositioning the aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle from the Baltic to the eastern Mediterranean. NATO is creeping toward this conflict one “defensive redeployment” at a time.

Oman. Two drones hit the Duqm commercial port on Sunday morning, injuring one foreign worker. Oman – the mediator. The country whose Foreign Minister was describing a diplomatic breakthrough less than 48 hours before the bombs fell. There are no US bases in Oman. The Omani FM’s response was blunt: “This is not your war”. But Duqm is a deepwater port that several countries, including the UK and US, have been developing for naval logistics. It sits south of the Strait of Hormuz, making it a potential bypass route. Hit Duqm, and you’re telling everyone that there is no “safe rear” in this conflict. Iran’s FM Araghchi offered another explanation: the strike came from “an isolated general” operating on “pre-written general directives” without real-time command contact — either a genuine command-and-control gap in a full-scale conflict, or perfect diplomatic cover for a strike they absolutely intended.

Now about those negotiations… This is the second time in less than a year that active US-Iran diplomacy was used as operational cover – the first was Operation Midnight Hammer in June 2025. Oman’s FM Albusaidi said he was “dismayed” and that “active and serious negotiations have yet again been undermined”. NBC reported Israel disrupted talks that were “close to success”. Iran’s FM Araghchi asked publicly: “Why does the US insist on starting negotiations and then attacking mid-talks”? Whatever your view of Iran’s regime, the answer to that question will determine whether any country trusts American diplomacy in this region for a generation.

An oil tanker – the Palau-flagged Skylight – was struck off Oman’s coast, with four of its 20 crew injured. Two more tankers, the MKD Vyom and Hercules Star, were also hit. A fourth vessel was targeted near Dubai. Maersk has suspended all Hormuz transit. Marine traffic through the Strait is down 70%, with over 150 tankers at anchor waiting. Heavy GPS jamming is being reported across the waterway.

The IRGC vs. the USS Abraham Lincoln. In its seventh communiqué, the IRGC claimed it struck the USS Abraham Lincoln with four anti-ship ballistic missiles. CENTCOM responded within the hour: “LIE. The Lincoln was not hit. The missiles launched didn’t even come close”. They posted pictures of the Lincoln continuing to launch aircraft. Open-source trackers place the carrier strike group in the wider Arabian Sea, outside the narrow Persian Gulf – smart positioning and exactly what I noted yesterday about US warships pulling back. The claim was for domestic consumption. Whether those four missiles splashed harmlessly or were intercepted by Aegis destroyers is a detail CENTCOM is happy to leave ambiguous.

Trump claims nine Iranian naval vessels sunk. CENTCOM has confirmed a Jamaran-class corvette struck at Chabahar pier. Iran’s navy was never going to survive a direct confrontation with the US 5th Fleet. That was never the point. The point was always the missiles – and the missiles are still flying.

Three American soldiers killed. CENTCOM confirmed Sunday evening: three US service members killed in action, five seriously wounded. Ground-based forces in Kuwait. These are the first American casualties of Operation Epic Failure Fury. Ali Al Salem Air Base – satellite imagery confirmed by Sentinel-2 – took multiple direct hits. A building housing soldiers was struck. The political clock just started ticking louder.

The global ripple. Iraq’s Islamic Resistance claimed 23 separate operations with dozens of kamikaze drones against bases across the region on Sunday alone. Nine killed at a US consulate storming attempt in Karachi. The Houthis are back in the Red Sea. Kataib Hezbollah threatening to escalate. Jordan intercepted 49 incoming objects. Kuwait: one dead, 32 wounded. The UAE absorbed 165 ballistic missiles, 2 cruise missiles, and 541 drones according to its own Defence Ministry – three foreign workers killed, 58 injured. The Crowne Plaza hotel in Manama took a hit. The alleged CIA station in Dubai was reportedly struck and burned. The Burj Al Arab was damaged. Schools and universities shut across the UAE through Wednesday. Dubai International Airport suspended operations indefinitely – kilometre-long queues of cars trying to flee, 14,000 flights cancelled, Italy’s Defence Minister trapped in the emirate. Syria – post-Assad Syria – condemned Iran and aligned with the Gulf states, a regional realignment that would have been unthinkable a year ago. France’s Camp de la Paix base in Abu Dhabi was struck and burning. Every country that hosts a US facility got hit. Every one.

The markets. Gold closed February at $5,278 – its highest monthly close in history. JP Morgan has formally called this a “structural repricing phase” with long-term targets at $6,000. But Chinese spot gold was priced post-attack in a “dark market” at ¥1,226 per gram – ~$5,560/oz. ~$280 premium over the COMEX close.

The physical gold supply chain has also been severed at a critical node. Dubai – the world’s major refining and redistribution hub feeding Switzerland, Hong Kong, and India – is shut. Flights cancelled, airport closed, port damaged. Reuters confirmed the disruption. Physical gold that was supposed to flow through the Emirates this week is going nowhere.

Silver closed Friday at $93.76 – also an all-time monthly close. Some weekend proxy markets briefly printed north of $115 before pulling back to around $104. The gold-silver ratio has compressed to ~57:1, a level that historically signals silver entering a leadership phase. COMEX was already under severe stress going into Friday. What happens Monday morning when the full weight of a Hormuz closure, a hot war, and a Chinese rare earth embargo hits the trading floor is not a question anyone can answer with confidence. But direction? That’s not in doubt.

Oil: weekend OTC pricing had Brent around $120. The Strait remains closed. Over 150 tankers sitting at anchor. The Gulf oil infrastructure that everyone quietly assumed was off-limits is now demonstrably not. Analysts are talking $150 if this extends beyond a week.

The domestic politics. Reuters/Ipsos polling shows only one in four Americans support the strikes on Iran. That’s a country that doesn’t want this war. Congress is voting on war powers resolutions this week, though they’ll be largely symbolic since they lack the two-thirds majority needed to override a veto. But the optics matter. Senator Tim Kaine: “No direct threat from Iran, no justification”. Senator Ted Cruz – not exactly a dove – noted there was “no indication Iran was close to nuclear weapons”. Congressman Thomas Massie: “Bombing Iran won’t make the Epstein documents disappear”. When you’ve lost Ted Cruz on a military operation, the political foundation is sand.

And Trump’s timeline? He told CNBC operations are “ahead of schedule”. He told CBS’s Robert Costa that a diplomatic resolution was “much easier now than it was a day ago, obviously, because they are getting beat up badly”. He said he knows “exactly who” is calling the shots in Iran now, “but I can’t tell you”. He warned Iran of “force never seen before”. He said the military campaign could extend for four weeks. He’s also reportedly already asked Iran for a ceasefire through back channels – on day one. Iran rejected it as they seem to believe that agreeing to the June 2025 ceasefire was a strategic error that gave the US and Israel eighteen months to restock interceptors and plan this operation, and they are not repeating that mistake.

Ali Larijani’s response: “Yesterday Iran fired missiles. Today we will hit with a force never experienced." Trump wanted a four-day war to force negotiations. He’s getting a two-year war footing from a country that just turned its dead supreme leader into a martyr."

"Tel Aviv Under Unprecedented Fire, Defense Systems Overwhelmed?"

Full screen recommended.
Prime News 24, 3/1/26
"Tel Aviv Under Unprecedented Fire, 
Defense Systems Overwhelmed?"
Comments here:

"Is Donald Trump Looking for an Exit Ramp?"

"Is Donald Trump Looking for an Exit Ramp?"
by Larry C. Johnson

"The Israel/US decapitation strike on Saturday hit the Ayatollah Khamenei when he was reportedly meeting with senior Iranian military officers. Was the Israeli hit a lucky coincidence or was this a deliberately planned trap? Did the US send a message to Khamenei for a meeting to discuss a US proposal in preparation for the planned Monday meeting - now cancelled - in Geneva? Whatever brought these senior Iranian officials together, it has been a Pyrrhic victory for the West and its Zionist masters. Killing Khamenei did not inspire Iranian opponents of the Islamic Republic to flood the streets of Tehran and demand the ouster of the mullahs. Nope, the attack rallied the Iranian people to embrace without hesistation the continued rule of the mullahs.

If you listen to Donald Trump’s public words, he is making wild claims about US military successes in killing Iranians. However, there are new reports that suggest Trump is panicked and searching for a way to declare victory and exit the war. Donald Trump asked Italy to mediate or serve as a conduit for proposing an immediate ceasefire with Iran, following the recent US-Israeli military strikes on Iranian targets (including the reported killing of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in late February 2026).

According to multiple media reports, US officials, through Italian mediation (likely involving Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s government or channels), proposed a swift ceasefire to de-escalate tensions and potentially return to negotiations. This was framed as an attempt to end the military campaign quickly after initial strikes achieved key objectives (e.g., degrading leadership and capabilities).

Nice try Donald… You’ve pissed away any shred of credibility you have left. Iran told the US to fuck off. The US/Israeli assassination of the Ayatollah Khomenei was the final straw for Iran. They have zero interest in a ceasefire in my opinion. The Iranians realize that they are in a stronger position to bleed the US and Israel of scarce weapon systems and force the US into a humiliating retreat.

If the US was really on the cusp of a major defeat of Iran, which would entail a regime change in Tehran, do you believe that Donald Trump would be entertaining the idea of a ceasefire and a return to negotiations? Hell no. Trump has made a major strategic error by going along with Israel and trying to force a regime change by killing Iran’s spiritual father, along with more than 100 school girls.

Although Iran is suffering some significant losses, it also is inflicting equal, if not more, pain on Israel and the US. Besides destroying the US military infrastructure in the UAE, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia, Iran’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz is going to cause significant economic harm to the Western financial order. I believe that Iran has an enormous reserve of ballistic and cruise missiles and will be able to sustain a campaign of attrition against both Israel and the US for at least two months. This is why Trump is now desperate to secure a ceasefire and try to put the toothpaste back in the tube. But Iran is having none of it.

I believe that by March 15, the US and Israel will be pleading - at least privately - for an end to the Iranian missile barrages. The death of Khamenei has removed a moderate from the Iranian chain of command. The agreement that Iranian authorities made on June 25, 2025 to end the missile attacks on Israel had the blessing of the Ayatollah. There were many in the IRGC leadership that opposed that decision, but they obeyed the decision of Khamenei. Now they have been vindicated. The US is not a trustworthy nor reliable negotiating partner. I believe the campaign will only conclude when Israel agrees to remove its forces from Gaza and the West Bank… Otherwise, Iran will continue to pummel and shred Israel’s economic, scientific and military infrastructure. Oh, and one more thing, all economic sanctions against Iran must be lifted.

Trump’s 2024 campaign promises about securing peace will haunt him for the remainder of his term… Many of his MAGA supporters will not forgive him for his perfidy. During Donald Trump’s 2024 presidential campaign, he repeatedly emphasized his opposition to “endless wars” (also called “forever wars” or “never-ending wars”) and positioned himself as the candidate who would avoid new military entanglements abroad, focusing instead on “America First” priorities and peace through strength.

During the 2024 campaign, Trump frequently contrasted himself with his Democratic opponent (Kamala Harris), calling her “the candidate of endless wars” while declaring himself “the candidate of peace.” He boasted that during his first term, he was “the first president in modern times to start no new wars,” a line he used prominently at the Republican National Convention (RNC) in July 2024, where he said his foreign policy would “bring stability to the world.” In various rallies (e.g., Iowa caucuses lead-up in January 2024), he promised to “turn the page forever on those foolish, stupid days of never-ending wars” and criticized past administrations for prolonged conflicts that drained U.S. resources. A signature phrase he repeated: “I’m not going to start a war. I’m going to stop wars.” This appeared in multiple contexts, including victory speeches and attacks on opponents. In his November 2024 election victory speech, he reiterated: “I’m not going to start a war. I’m going to stop wars,” tying it to redirecting resources toward domestic issues rather than foreign conflicts.

Trump has betrayed the people who, like me, foolishly believed in his bullshit. He has now launched a war that the US cannot win, and as the corpses of dead Americans killed in this needless, illegal war are delivered to Dover, Delaware, Trump’s popularity will plummet. I fully anticipate that he will be impeached and convicted before his term is up. He will have no one to blame but himself. He could have secured a deal with Iran that would have guaranteed that Iran would not acquire a nuclear weapon. Instead, he chose war and will wear that dead, stinking albatross around his neck for the remainder of his miserable term."

Sunday, March 1, 2026

"Scott Ritter: "Things are Terrible!" Iran's Secret Weapon Will Devastate Israel & U.S!"

A MUST-VIEW!
Global War Analysis, 3/1/26
"Scott Ritter: "Things are Terrible!" 
Iran's Secret Weapon Will Devastate Israel & U.S!"
Comments here:

"Alert! 4 Ships Hit! Market Shutdown! Total Chaos Unfolding, World War 3 Exploding!"

Prepper News, 3/1/26
"Alert! 4 Ships Hit! Market Shutdown! 
Total Chaos Unfolding, World War 3 Exploding!"
Comments here:

"Daniel Davis: U.S. Miscalculation - War Not Going as Planned"

Glenn Diesen, 3/1/26
"Daniel Davis: U.S. Miscalculation - 
War Not Going as Planned"
"Lt. Col. Daniel Davis is a 4x combat veteran, the recipient of the Ridenhour Prize for Truth-Telling, and is the host of the Daniel Davis Deep Dive YouTube channel. After the second day of the war, Lt. Col. Davis discusses why the war against Iran is not going as planned and Iran has too many advantages."
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Money Over History, 3/1/26
"$13B USS Abraham Lincoln Under Fire:
 Now Trump Wants Ceasefire"
"The $13 billion USS Abraham Lincoln came under fire in one of the most dramatic escalations in the Middle East conflict. As missiles targeted U.S. assets and tensions surged across the region, reports suggest the White House is now signaling interest in a ceasefire. Was this operation meant to be short and decisive? Why is Washington suddenly pushing for negotiations? And what does this mean for U.S. military power, oil markets, and the Strait of Hormuz?"
Comments here:

Musical Interlude: 2002, "The End Is a Beginning"

Full screen recommended.
2002, "The End Is a Beginning"

"A Look to the Heavens"

"Spiral galaxy NGC 4651 is a mere 35 million light-years distant, toward the well-groomed constellation Coma Berenices. About 50 thousand light-years across, this galaxy is seen to have a faint umbrella-shaped structure (right) that seems to extend some 50 thousand light-years farther, beyond the bright galactic disk. The giant cosmic umbrella is now known to be composed of tidal star streams. The streams themselves are extensive trails of stars gravitationally stripped from a smaller satellite galaxy that was eventually torn apart.
Recent work by a remarkable collaboration of amateur and professional astronomers to image faint structures around bright galaxies suggests that even in nearby galaxies, such tidal star streams are common. The result is predicted by models of galaxy formation, including the formation of our Milky Way."

Chet Raymo, “Exile”

“Exile”
by Chet Raymo

   “ Are we truly alone
    With our physics and myths,
    The stars no more
    Than glittering dust,
    With no one there
    To hear our choral odes?”

“This is the ultimate question, the only question, asked here by the Northern Irish poet Derek Mahon. It is a poem of exile, from the ancient familiar, from the sustaining myth of rootedness, of centrality. A poem that the naturalist can relate to, we pilgrims of infinite spaces, of the overarching blank pages on which we write our own stories, our own scriptures, having none of divine pedigree.

Yes, we feel the ache of exile, we who grew up with the sustaining myths of immortality only to see them stripped away by the needy hands of fact. We scribble our choral odes. Who listens? We speak to each other. Is that enough? Having left the home we grew up in, we make do with where we find ourselves, gathering to ourselves the glittering dust of the here and now. Are we truly alone? Mahon again:

    “If so, we can start
    To ignore the silence
    Of infinite space
    And concentrate instead
    on the infinity
    Under our very noses -
    The cry at the heart
    Of the artichoke,
    The gaiety of atoms.”

Better to leave the blank page blank than fill it with sentimental hankerings for home, with those prayers of our childhood we repeated over and over until they became a hard, fast crust on the page. Incline our ear instead to the faint cry that issues from the world under our very noses, from there, the tomato plant on the window sill, the ink-dark crow that paces the grass beyond the panes, the clouds that heap on the horizon - the dizzy, ditzy dance of atoms and the glitterings of stars.”

"We Are..."