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Monday, April 6, 2026

"13th Warrior, Prayers Before Final Battle"

Full screen recommended.
"13th Warrior, Prayers Before Final Battle"

"In the movie "The 13th Warrior" Antonio Banderas' character, an Arab Muslim, delivered a prayer just before an epic battle that has stuck with me ever since. Some of the words in that prayer are words that have inspired me to say and do and think some of the things that I have since I walked out of the theater on the night that I saw that movie. This prayer, although delivered by a Muslim rather than Christian character, has become part of me. The words are beautiful and simple and eloquent:

"Merciful Father... I have squandered my days with plans of many things. This was not among them. But at this moment, I beg only to live the next few minutes well. For all we ought to have thought and have not thought, all we ought to have said and have not said, all we ought to have done and have not done, I pray thee, God, for forgiveness."

Of course if you think about it this prayer also spawns thoughts to the inverse of the lines used; i.e. Father forgive me for the things that I/we have thought that I ought not have thought, for the things I have said, that I ought not have said, for things I have done that I ought not have done.

Then brave Buliwyf begins to pray, also, to his many pagan gods and to his ancestors, and is joined by all the members of his band:

Buliwyf: "Lo, there do I see my father."
Herger: "Lo, there do I see My mother, and my sisters, and my brothers. Lo, there do I see The line of my people..."
Edgtho: "Back to the beginning."
Weath: "Lo, they do call to me."
Fahdlan: "They bid me take my place among them."
Buliwyf: "In the halls of Valhalla..."
Fahdlan: "Where the brave..."
Herger: "May live..."
Ahmed: "...forever."

The Daily "Near You?"

Grangeville, Idaho, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"Trump: 'If it were up to me I would take the oil. I'd keep the oil. I'd make plenty of money'"

"Trump: 'If it were up to me I would take the oil. 
I'd keep the oil. I'd make plenty of money'"
by Leo Hohmann

"Here we are on Day 36 of a war that was supposed to be over in a week or two, as if anyone can ever predict how long a war will last once it starts. Things always happen that are unexpected. Capabilities of opponents are often underestimated, especially when it comes to a people’s ability and willingness to stubbornly defend their homeland. It’s a war of choice for us. It’s a war of survival for them.

That’s why wars should always be a last resort, defensive in nature. War should never be a convenient tool you whip out in order to get what you want in terms of resources or trade routes, or whatever makes up the true motivation of Washington’s neocons.

Donald Trump has lost his patience for the Iranian regime. In a post on Easter Sunday morning to his Truth Social account, he referred to them as “crazy bastards” who need to take his deal or risk being obliterated. He ended the post with something truly bizarre, even for Trump. See below.
He said Monday that he can’t believe the Iranians haven’t “cried uncle.” “But they will,” he added. “And if they don’t, then they’ll have no bridges, no power plants. They’ll have no anything. I won’t go any further because there are other things that are worse than those two.”

The Iranians have already promised that if Trump bombs their civilian power grid, bridges and oil infrastructure, then they will bomb the same types of targets in the U.S.-allied Arab Gulf states of Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, UAE, Qatar, and Bahrain. This would deal a death blow to the world economy, which runs on oil, gas and critical fertilizers that pass through the Strait of Hormuz. It would set off energy and food shortages of a magnitude the modern world has never before experienced, followed by extreme inflation, famine and starvation. Not to mention the refugees. Floods of refugees driven from their homes in Iran and the Arab Gulf states. Where will they go? Why, into the West of course!

But Trump didn’t stop there in his Monday rant. It gets worse. “I won’t go any further because there are other things that are worse than those two,” he said. This sounds like a not-so-veiled threat of a nuclear holocaust against Iran, a country of 92 million, including more than 500,000 Christians. But before he could expound on that threat, his mind switched to the oil.

Trump stated that “if I had my choice what would I like to do? Take the oil. Because it’s there for the taking, and there’s not a thing they can do about it. Unfortunately, the American people would like to see us come home. If it were up to me I’d take the oil. I’d keep the oil. I’d make plenty of money.”

But wait, we were told this was about stopping Iran from getting a nuclear weapon and freeing the Iranian people from the grips of an oppressive regime. Trump’s latest comments once again provide a window into his true motivations. He just can’t help himself. He is obsessed with money, oil and resource wealth and he tells us as much in no uncertain terms. “I’d take the oil. I’d keep the oil. I’d make plenty of money.” He’s already done this with Venezuela. Now Iran. Wash. Rinse. Repeat. If he is successful in Iran, who will be next? Cuba? Greenland? Canada? Mexico?

The sitting president of the United States is talking like he’s the world’s most feared pirate, or some kind of tribal kingpin. If something is “there for the taking,” he wants to take it. Not because it’s his, not because it’s right, just because he can. He has the power to take it so why not? And we say “God bless America?” How can God bless a nation with this kind of gangster mentality?

This is the epitome of unrighteous raw-power politics and if he is allowed to continue in this way, unchecked by Congress, then I believe he will be the last American president who holds office under even the pretense of us being a constitutional republic. How ironic as we get ready to celebrate the 250th anniversary of our constitutional republic, a nation of laws with checks and balances designed to prevent any one person or group of individuals from attaining unchecked power. Instead, we have devolved into a system of “might makes right,” and, shockingly, most Americans seem OK with that.

On Easter Sunday, Trump called the Iranians “crazy bastards” for having the audacity to defend their country against an outside invading force, armed to the teeth and bent on their total destruction. He used the foulest language to threaten them with war crimes, saying that if they didn’t agree to end the war on his terms, then 48 hours later on Tuesday evening he would bomb their civilian bridges and knock out their electric power grid, leading to untold human suffering and a mass outflow of Islamic refugees.

Trump is either not playing with a full deck, or he is being controlled by an outside entity bent on the total destruction of America as we know it. The world will not forever tolerate a brigand of this magnitude, a man who uses the power of the United States military to steal the wealth of other countries and demand they sign away their sovereignty under threats of bombings to the point of total obliteration.

A world order based on one man’s demands is not sustainable, not for America and not for the world. After that man is gone, there will be a terrible price to pay. Trump, who rode to power on the laudible idea of “America first,” has come to represent naked militarism and unprovoked aggression. He is willing to use American military force in ways it was never meant to be used, to plunder what is not rightfully his.

This is not who we are as a people. We used to stand against this type of behavior by other countries. Stealing another country’s resources and making them a vassal of the United States is brute colonialism of the type that went out of style in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

Trump’s comments over the weekend and again on Monday once again prove this war is not about preventing Iran from getting a nuclear weapon. It’s about money and resources and greed. And not one U.S. Senator, other than perhaps Rand Paul, has had the courage to stand up and tell the president that his behavior is unconstitutional and un-American, and that it must stop.

Trump even made the outrageous claim during his press conference Monday that his administration has been contacted by Iranians pleading with him to keep bombing them. “Please keep bombing us,” we are supposed to believe they’re telling our government. “Please come back and bomb our homes again!” Only a complete moron would believe such a ridiculous propaganda story.

Then you have congressmen like Rep. Rick Crawford, R-Ark., making equally ridiculous and outrageous comments on Fox News about how Iran needs to “do the right thing” and agree to Trump’s ceasefire deal. You can hear him if you fast-forward to the 15-minute mark in the video podcast by Lt. Col. Daniel Davis below:
Crawford says, with a straight face, that he wants the Iranian people to “do the right thing.” This is a talking point I’ve heard others repeating. Do the right thing? By handing over their oil wealth and surrendering their sovereignty to a foreign power?

What if Russia or China launched an unprovoked war against us, bombed our buildings, bridges, power grid and other civilian infrastructure, assassinated our top government leaders, and then ordered us to “do the right thing” by surrendering on their terms? We would say they were crazy and tell them to go pound sand. We would fight to the death to defend our country. Why do we expect anything less from our adversaries?

The best-case scenario would be for we the people to remove Trump from office under the 25th Amendment. This way, the world will know in very clear terms that we do not approve of this kind of gunboat diplomacy and trampling over the sovereignty of other nations. Until that happens, our nation is in grave danger."

"President Makes the News for Declaring Holy War, and America Will Pay the Price"

"President Makes the News for Declaring Holy War, 
and America Will Pay the Price"
by David Haggith

"Two powerful headlines came out right after I wrote my weekend Deeper Dive about the apocalyptic cult driving the presidents war from within the White House and the Pentagon: “The President’s Prophet and the Pentagon’s High Priest Predict ARMAGEDDON!

One of the articles was titled “TRUMP INVOKES HOLY WAR” as the top headline in large print and all in caps on Drudge. The full headline of the article on the publisher’s page was “Donald Trump invokes holy war as he gives final Easter Monday ultimatum to Iran.” The other article title was “Trump tells Iran: Open the f---ing strait you crazy b----rds!” The two headlines hit me like they were the exclamation point on the article I wrote over the weekend.

The first story quotes the president as saying, "Donald Trump has invoked a holy war in a furious final Easter Monday ultimatum to Iran: “Remember when I gave Iran ten days to MAKE A DEAL or OPEN UP THE HORMUZ STRAIT. Time is running out - 48 hours before all Hell will reign down on them. [sic] Glory be to GOD! President DONALD J. TRUMP”

Sounds like the apocalyptic religious fervor behind this war that I wrote about, straight from the mouth of the president. Extraordinary even for Trump. This kind of religiously laden statement is certainly not what we are accustomed to hearing from US presidents, who have always tried to make sure, when fighting in the Middle East, that their statements carry no content that would sound like their war is religiously based, lest that incite jihad in the Arab world, joining all Muslims together in the fight. The guys in the White House and the Pentagon seem to be wanting to incite jihad by repeatedly emphasizing the religious basis for their present war, which they started.

The US starting the war makes it a defensive war for Iran, which is essential for declaring jihad under Arab understanding of jihad. It’s like NATO, a defensive agreement, but with a religious basis that says Muslim nations must join each other in defending their religion if attacked. By framing the war in apocalyptic religious terms the US is encouraging Arabs and Persians and other Muslims to understand the war as an attack on Islam, which makes jihad, in their view, all the more appropriate.

US presidents have typically bent over backwards to make clear that the wars they are raining down on the Middle East have nothing to do with Islam to avoid heightening those possible interpretations of the war, which are the very thing that could turn this into full-scale World War III and a “holy war” at the same time.

The other article says, "Donald Trump has threatened to strike more of Iran’s critical infrastructure if the Strait of Hormuz is not reopened tomorrow in an expletive-laden social media post. “Tuesday will be Power Plant Day, and Bridge Day, all wrapped up in one... Open the f---ing Strait, you crazy b-----rds, or you’ll be living in hell – just watch! Praise be to Allah,” he said in on Truth Social. That’s throwing it in their face by using a phrase that sounds awfully close to their “Allahu Akbar,” often shouted just before some horrific act of violence in their name for God Have we ever been in more directly apocalyptic times?

Tariff it! Americans are already going to pay big. The US war continues to put West Texas Intermediate crude in the rare “backwardization” where it is priced above Brent Crude (European oil from the North Sea). That is a huge windfall from war for US industry and some US billionaires, but a massive tax for US citizens to pay. It’s a win for the Military Industrial Complex … or, at least, one major part of it. For most of us, it just means desperately higher prices for everything that oil goes into.

That is, unless Trump does what Trump says he loves to do and puts an export tax on US oil. WTI is now selling at a 30-40% premium, which puts the price up for domestic users of America’s own oil because it is an open, competitive market. So, producers will sell to the best price. The real purpose of export tariffs is found in exactly this situation, which is to reduce external sales so that a nation’s people (or government) have enough of the nation’s own product.

Since the sellers of US oil are profiting exorbitantly from a war that taxpayers are entirely paying for, the US government should put an export tax on that oil for 30-40%, taking that wartime windfall and putting it in the government’s coffers to help offset the taxpayers cost for the war. The oil producers didn’t do anything exceptional to realize these enormous gains from war, which is why they lobby for war.

Take the entire benefit away, then maybe that component of the MIC will stop lobbying for war. Use the windfall to pay for the war in cash and to drive down fuel prices for US taxpayers by removing the incentive to sell all US oil to foreign buyers for higher profits. Under such a tariff, US oil producers can either sell to foreign buyers for the same profit they get from US buyers because they have to reduce their price to offset the tariff, with the government pocketing the full difference between what the oil producer charges and what the foreign buyers has to pay, or they can sell to US buyers for the same amount of money they are getting under that tariffed situation from foreign buyers.

How the cost of this war will endure: Even with an export tariff, the war tax US consumers are now paying on oil will continue for a long time. As Reagan’s budget planner (very familiar with the oil-based stagflation of the 70’s under the OPEC embargo) says, “This is not your grandfather’s stagflation.” In fact, I’m inclined to believe that another article in the headlines section today is right in claiming that oil prices will NEVER return to what they were before the war.

“I don’t think we’re going back to the pre-war prices for the foreseeable future,” said Mark Zandi, the chief economist of Moody’s Analytics and among the first economists to predict the 2008 financial crisis, speaking with Politico for its report Monday. “Certainly won’t be this year, won’t even be next year. Might not be ever.”

The difference between now and back then, as both writers point out, and as I also said last week, is that oil was shut off with a simple decree back then, so it could be turned back on when the Arab objective was met with another OPEC decree. This time, however, the ability to transport oil from well to sea is being destroyed, and the ability to refine crude oil into products is being destroyed. The only thing that can be turned back on overnight by decree is opening up the Strait of Hormuz, but it will take years to fully repair destroyed infrastructure in that arena to where the oil supply lines that have been taken out can start moving again.

As Stockman says, "We are going to get a globe-shaking economic conflagration erupting from the void that was the Persian Gulf commodity fountain. That includes between 20% and 50% of all the basic commodities that drive global GDP, including crude oil, LPGs, LNG, ammonia, urea, sulfur, helium, and sundry more."

Stockman points out a different but equally valid reason the crisis Trump has created will not be like the OPEC Oil Crisis. The high inflation was not as painful because America had just experienced thirty years of a roaring economy. So, when the economy was taken way down by the limited supply of oil and the high costs of oil, American spending power was still generally running at a slightly positive grade. We, on the other hand begin with an economy that had already fallen essentially to zero real GDP growth after Trump’s first tariff-enthusiastic year.

(That happened because IMPORT tariffs, which were Trump’s entire focus, make everything more expensive for US consumers and companies because most of what we buy is imported, and most of the rest of what we buy is filled with imported parts or resources. EXPORT tariffs, in a case like this, merely reduce exorbitant extra profits that come from price premiums for US companies on foreign sales. The companies sell the oil at the premium price, but the government skims off all the premium in taxes because the government created that exorbitant pricing opportunity for them with its war; they didn’t earn it. Since the premium portion of the price is purely the windfall of war, the companies will still make the same profit they made during non-war times from selling to foreign entities; but for US customers, prices get held down because they are not bid up by more desperate foreign buyers and the oil company doesn’t have to pay the tariff on sales to domestic buyers. All of that helps offset what taxpayers would also be on the hook for with this war.)

Stockman points out that, in the seventies, US incomes had long been rising at more than 3% per year, while inflation had long been less than that. So, they were more able to absorb the much higher inflation that came along in the seventies because their incomes had for a couple of decades been pushed up in buying power. So, they lost buying power during the OPEC crisis, but were still ahead of where they had been years before. It wasn’t fun or good, but it was endurable because they had somewhat of a cushion.

Now, however, US consumers are being hit after coming out of years of inflation that have already seriously eroded their buying power - inflation that was still higher than anything they had seen for many years and inflation that was already rising again. They are already drained and reliant on credit for everyday expenses, and credit is already, due to the cost of tariffs, defaulting at a much higher rate than it had been pre-Trump.

Total public and private debt back in the seventies was a TINY fraction of what it is today in the US; so there was a lot more capacity to weather through by using increased debt as a tool. During the seventies total national and private debt went from 147% of GDP to 162%.

BUT… Debt outstanding now totals nearly $108 trillion and weighs in at 343% of national income (GDP). That is to say, as we head into the next stagflationary era, the US economy will be carrying two turns of extra debt relative to income than was the case in 1970.

In an already depleted state, consumers are now getting hit by huge cost increases from this war with elevated prices that the other article says are not going away: “I don’t think we’re going back to the pre-war prices for the foreseeable future,” said Mark Zandi, the chief economist of Moody’s Analytics and among the first economists to predict the 2008 financial crisis, speaking with Politico for its report Monday. “Certainly won’t be this year, won’t even be next year. Might not be ever….” In an apparent effort to address concerns over rising prices, Trump has said gas prices would “come tumbling down” as soon as the United States pulls out of Iran, as would inflation – a claim Zandi rejected out of hand…. [Naive or outright lying.]

Even if the conflict were to be resolved soon, business leaders fear that any market improvements would be delayed by months. “The die is being cast for the rest of the year for what’s going to happen in the markets,” said Jim Fitterling, the CEO of Dow Inc., speaking at the CERAWeek conference in Houston recently, as reported…. “It’s like the unwind we saw on supply chains during COVID. You could be in the 250- to 275-day range. This is not going to be an instantaneous rewind.”

OPEC didn’t break things. Maybe people, but not things. This war has broken a lot of things, as wars do, but this war, unlike all previous wars, has focused particularly intensively on breaking OILY things. So, prices will rise for as long as it takes to manufacture and install these things.

Moreover, the prospect of resolving all of this by saving the collapsing economy with a Trumpian attack on interest rates to reduce the cost of all that debt is now unlikely to work as the president thinks. As I just wrote to a reader who asked me about this …"I don’t think rates will go lower. I think Big Beautiful Bill will demand higher rates. Rapidly expanding war spending will add huge additions of debt to what BBB already created. All that debt is going to demand higher rates of interest. Soaring inflation from oil-based cost increases for the next 2-3 years will also demand higher interest as bond rates are highly inflation-sensitive.

With all of that, I don’t think it will matter much what the Fed does, unless it does QE beyond what we’ve ever seen because there is just too much new debt to keep hosing up, plus the compounding interest on all of that to be financed with each new issue of debt.

I think the failing economy will also lower the nation’s credit ratings, and, at the same time, demand more debt spending in order to save the economy. With all of that, I think it more likely the system will blow up from overload than that it will pave the way to lower interest just because it desperately needs lower interest… In short, I think the bond vigilantes will demand higher interest in spite of what the president wants or what the Fed might do if it were inclined to give the president what he wants.

Or, as David Stockman put it, "But after February 28th and Trump’s initiation of a war in the Persian Gulf that can’t be won and which will send the global economy into a tailspin like nothing seen since the mid-1970s, we are truly off to the stagflationary races. Energy and fuel costs have already soared. Most importantly, the workhorse hydrocarbon of the US economy- diesel fuels used by the nation’s massive fleet of trucks, rail, and farm tractors - is already above its 2022 level at $5.40 per gallon and still climbing. [Now $6.19 where I live!]

Likewise, on the very eve of the planting season fertilizer costs have already doubled, meaning that application rates will be cut back, yields will fall, and food prices will be soaring by the 4th of July when the USDA crop condition reports pretty much forecast the fall production levels.

And, of course, no one took into account that the natural gas processing plants of Qatar were fastened at the hip to the semiconductor plants in South Korea and Taiwan and from there to the entire manufacturing sector of the world. All of this through the life line of helium gas extracted from natural processing plants.

In short, these soaring commodity prices are going to push the inflation indices higher, even as industrial output contracts owing to rising costs and limited availability. Labor markets are frozen as much as they were in the depth of lockdowns from April 2020, while new home sales are evaporating.

That’s stagflation by any other name, but this time the Fed will not be in a position to do much about either inflation or recessionary pressures. Neither, with $40-trillion of national debt, can the Fed fight this inflation by raising interest rates. That would sink the US government, not to mention what it would do to the much larger amounts of private debt. Nor dare the government add to that debt mountain in order to stimulate the economy because that, too, would push interest rates higher in order to find buyers for the extra debt. So, dream on Trump. The damage is done. Your inflation is here to stay! Fait accompli!"

"Well, It Is Our Fate..."

"Well, it is our fate to live in a time of crisis. To live in a time when all forms and values are being challenged. In other and more easy times, it was not, perhaps, necessary for the individual to confront himself with a clear question: What is it that you really believe? What is it that you really cherish? What is it for which you might, actually, in a showdown, be willing to die? I say, with all the reticence which such large, pathetic words evoke, that one cannot exist today as a person, one cannot exist in full consciousness, without having to have a showdown with ones self, without having to define what it is that one lives by, without being clear in ones mind what matters and what does not matter."
- Dorothy Thompson
o
“When the pain of leaving behind what we know outweighs the pain of embracing it, or when the power we face is overwhelming and neither flight nor fight will save us, there may be salvation in sitting still. And if salvation is impossible, then at least before perishing we may gain a clearer vision of where we are. By sitting still I do not mean the paralysis of dread, like that of a rabbit frozen beneath the dive of a hawk. I mean something like reverence, a respectful waiting, a deep attentiveness to forces much greater than our own.”
- Scott Russell Sanders

Folks, I fear our time for such reverence has come.
And so, we bravely face it. God help us, God help us all...

Bill Bonner, "Night at the Museum"

"Night at the Museum"
Everyone knows that the feds are already insolvent, with spending 
commitments eight times as much as their revenues. But if you 
can’t spend money you don’t have on war, what can you spend it on?
by Bill Bonner

‘Open the F**king Strait, you crazy bastards, or you’ll be
 living in Hell - JUST WATCH!...Praise be to Allah.’
- Donald J. Trump

Baltimore, Maryland - The weekend began on the edge of our chair. A US pilot was being pursued by both US and Iranian forces...each racing to get to him before the other. Iran has been beaten to a bloody pulp by US and Israeli forces...or so we were told. It is helpless...defenseless...its radar, air force, navy, artillery - all decimated.

Yet, on Friday, it was somehow still able to get off two lucky shots. It downed America’s ultra-sophisticated and very expensive aircraft - the F15E - and an A-10 ‘Warthog.’ This happened, apparently, while the US was busy targeting civilian infrastructure (a war crime, sayeth the media). SAN: "US destroys 3 of Iran’s main bridges as Trump follows through with threat to hit ‘extremely hard.’

The Iran War because it is beginning to look like a banana peel on a museum’s marble floor. Someone’s likely to slip up and fall hard...and in all the excitement, no one will notice the Rembrandt walking out the door. CBS News: Trump’s 2027 budget asks Congress for $1.5 trillion in defense spending, with 10% cuts elsewhere President Trump’s budget proposal for fiscal year 2027 asks Congress for $1.5 trillion in defense spending - a 42% increase - while cutting nondefense spending by $73 billion, or 10%.

Everybody knows that the firepower industry is going to get more money. War costs money. And everybody who’s spent time in Washington knows that non-defense spending won’t go down. And everyone who has been following the news also knows that the feds are already insolvent, with spending commitments eight times as much as their revenues. But if you can’t spend money you don’t have on war...what can you spend it on? And with so much drama going on, who’s watching the cash?

Meanwhile, the headlines recalled the last hostage crisis in Iran. To bring less hoary readers up to speed, the US/CIA had derailed Iran’s fledgling democracy in 1953 by putting the ‘Shah’ back on the throne. Then, in 1979, the Shah went to New York for cancer treatment. Allowing the Shah into the US was bound to cause trouble. Everyone knew it. But the policymakers had a quaint sense of loyalty to him. Hendrik Hertzberg, President Carter’s chief speechwriter explained that “This guy was a sh*t, but he was our sh*t for all these years.”

Students - not the government itself - then seized the American embassy. This was a huge affront to diplomatic tradition and international law. But it went over well in Iran, boosting the popularity of the new government. It paid to have friends. Six US embassy employees escaped and were taken in by Canadian and Swedish diplomats. They left the country with false passports, pretending to be members of a film crew.

But the administration of Jimmy Carter, who had real military experience, and perhaps a fresh recollection of trying to bomb Vietnam “back to the Stone Age,” was remarkably restrained. It did, however, attempt a military rescue. That effort was both extremely inept and unlucky. It resulted in the accidental deaths of eight US soldiers...and the extraction of zero hostages.

Otherwise, Carter’s approach was wise. It cost almost nothing. Except for the aforementioned accidental deaths, it involved no incendiaries, no jackass threats, and left no dead bodies. And the hostages were released after 444 days. Carter had sacrificed (it turned out) his own re-election ambition to get the hostages back safely. Fortunately, the downed Airman was recovered safely on Saturday night. Donald Trump didn’t have to face the same problem."

"How It Really Is"

”Have we not come to such an impasse in the modern world that we must love our enemies – or else? The chain reaction of evil – hate begetting hate, wars producing more wars – must be broken, or else we shall be plunged into the dark abyss of annihilation.” 
- Martin Luther King, Jr.

”I imagine one of the reasons people cling to their hates so stubbornly is because they sense, once hate is gone, they will be forced to deal with pain.”
- James Baldwin

Dan, I Allegedly, "This Is All a Distraction - Here’s What They’re Hiding"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 4/6/26
"This Is All a Distraction - 
Here’s What They’re Hiding"
Comments here:

"April 6: Today Changes Everything! Iran Deadline, Oil Spike, Recession 49%"

Full screen recommended.
Prof. Jiang Xueqin 4/6/26
"April 6: Today Changes Everything! Iran Deadline, 
Oil Spike, Recession 49%"
Comments here:

"Home Depot and Walmart Issue Stark Warning To U.S. Economy"

Full screen recommended.
Michael Bordenaro, 4/6/26
   "Home Depot and Walmart Issue
 Stark Warning To U.S. Economy"
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Snyder Reports, 4/6/26
"Out Of Fuel -
 Your Local Gas Station is Next"
Comments here:

"This Will Be Different... Massive Changes"

Full screen recommended.
Adventures With Danno, 4/6/26
"This Will Be Different... Massive Changes"
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
The Unfolded States,4/6/26
"Grocery Crisis Is Coming
 as Fuel Costs Hit Hard in America"
"Fuel prices are rising again across the United States, and the impact is starting to move beyond the pump. While grocery prices have not surged dramatically yet, the cost behind food is increasing across transport, farming, and supply chains. This video breaks down what is changing and why it matters now. From diesel-driven logistics to farm-level decisions, the pressure is building in stages. Data from agencies like USDA and BLS shows early signals, while global energy trends are adding more uncertainty. The key question is not whether fuel costs impact food prices, but how much of that impact has not reached store shelves yet. If current trends continue, grocery prices could adjust faster than expected. This is not a full grocery crisis yet, but the conditions are forming. Understanding these signals early can help you see where the market is heading before it becomes obvious."
Comments here:

Sunday, April 5, 2026

"Under The Weather"

Under the weather so posting will be sporadic. Back to normal 
asap. Thank you for your patience and understanding.
- CP

“The Everything Meltdown”: Global Supply Chains Are Collapsing And Most People Cannot Even Imagine The Pain That Is Coming"

by Michael Snyder

"When global supply chains collapse, the pain is not felt immediately. Tankers that left their destinations before the war with Iran began are still arriving at their destinations, products that were manufactured prior to the war still fill our shelves, and we are still eating food that was produced last year. So even though global supply chains are collapsing all around us, most people don’t feel it yet. But if this war with Iran drags on for months, the pain that we will soon experience will be unbelievable.

Anyone that thinks that the global economy can continue to function at or near current levels without sufficient supplies of oil, natural gas, plastic and fertilizer is just being delusional. The only way that we can avoid “the everything meltdown” is if this war ends quickly. Even if the Strait of Hormuz is reopened tomorrow, we will not see a return to pre-war conditions any time soon because damage that has been done to energy infrastructure in the Middle East will take years to fully rebuild.

With each passing day, the damage is getting even worse. For example, the biggest natural gas processing facility in the United Arab Emirates was just shut down following an Iranian attack…"Abu Dhabi’s Habshan gas facility, the UAE’s largest natural gas processing site, was shut down after debris from an intercepted Iranian missile caused a fire. The plant processes and distributes gas from the emirate’s fields for domestic use, making it a critical component of the country’s energy infrastructure. The attack comes amid a series of Iranian strikes on Gulf energy assets, including oil refineries and desalination plants in Kuwait, underscoring the vulnerability of regional infrastructure."

And just hours ago, the Iranians caused substantial damage at the Shuwaikh Oil Sector Complex in Kuwait…"An Iranian drone attack caused a fire at the Shuwaikh Oil Sector Complex, Kuwaiti authorities confirmed on Sunday morning. The attack caused no casualties, the official Kuwait News Agency (KUNA) reported. The facility hosts both the Kuwait Petroleum Corporation and the Oil Ministry’s headquarters, KUNA noted."

Over the past month, we have witnessed so much destruction to vital infrastructure, and it appears that the war is going to escalate to an entirely new level this week. If President Trump follows through on his threats to destroy Iran’s power grid, the Iranians have warned that they will unleash unprecedented attacks on energy infrastructure all over the region. One energy industry insider is warning that we are facing “sustained, compounding cost pressure across every industry”… “This is headed toward sustained, compounding cost pressure across every industry that touches fuel, which is effectively every industry,” said Herman Nieuwoudt, president of IFS Energy & Resources.

Nieuwoudt says what we’re seeing right now isn’t a single price shock. “It’s the consequence of the largest energy supply disruption in modern history layered on top of six years of structural volatility,” he said. “These disruptions cascade through manufacturing, packaging, agriculture, transportation, and retail in ways that take months to fully materialize,” he added.

He is right. Literally just about everything is going to cost more in the months ahead. Virtually our entire trucking industry runs on diesel, and at this point the average price of diesel fuel in the U.S. has reached a staggering $5.53 a gallon…"Diesel, widely used in farming, construction and trucking, among other industries, has risen even more sharply than gas, with the U.S. average this week hitting $5.53 a gallon, up from $3.64 a year ago, according to AAA."

This is survivable, but what are we going to do when it reaches 10 dollars a gallon? Already, the average price of diesel fuel in San Francisco has surpassed 8 dollars a gallon…"For the first time on record, average diesel prices in San Francisco have surged past $8 per gallon, according to new data from GasBuddy - marking an unprecedented milestone for any U.S. city."

Maybe you don’t care about the price of diesel fuel. But you should, because the cost of diesel fuel is going to be passed along to you. Already, shipping companies are starting to impose very large fuel surcharges on their customers…"Citing higher energy costs, the United States Postal Service announced last month that it’s planning to impose an 8% surcharge on Priority Mail Express, Priority Mail, USPS Ground Advantage and Parcel Select services.

E-commerce giant Amazon also said that, beginning April 17, it plans to add a 3.5% fuel surcharge on third-party sellers, while FedEx and UPS have also recently introduced fuel surcharges, according to the Associated Press."

Stuff doesn’t just show up on your doorstep or in the stores by magic. It takes fuel to move stuff around, and so all of the stuff that you buy on a regular basis is about to get more expensive. And that is really bad news, because even before the war we were already in the midst of a historic cost of living crisis.

In many areas of the U.S., the price of a pound of ground beef is now higher than the federal minimum wage…"The cost of a pound of ground beef has hit a major threshold. Depending on where you shop, the grocery staple likely costs more than the federal minimum wage. Money analyzed ground beef prices at seven of the most popular grocery chains across the U.S., finding that 1 pound of the typical 20% fat ground beef costs between $6.49 and $8.96. Organic, grass-fed and leaner varieties tend to cost much more."

On the other hand, the federal minimum wage sits at $7.25 per hour. In 1988, you could get a pound of ground beef for about $1.30. This is what happens when you destroy your economy. And now the war in the Middle East is going to make things much, much worse.

Just about everything that we buy either contains plastic or comes wrapped in plastic. Unfortunately, the war with Iran is severely disrupting global plastic supply chains…"Plastics are core to the modern economy, and a troubling new Bloomberg report indicates that several producers of monoethylene glycol (MEG) and purified terephthalic acid (PTA) have declared force majeure, as tanker flows through the Strait of Hormuz remain heavily disrupted.

For context, MEG and PTA are the two primary feedstocks used to produce polyethylene terephthalate (PET) and polyester fibers. These petrochemicals are critical to the production of everyday consumer goods that make life in the developed world convenient, including plastic bottles, food packaging, clothing, home furnishings, and a wide range of consumer and industrial goods.

More specifically, MEG is used in the production of polyester yarn, polyester staple fiber, PET resin, and PET film. It also plays a critical role in antifreeze, coolants, adhesives, coatings, and enamels. In other words, MEG and PTA are foundational petrochemical building blocks for the modern economy. Any sustained disruption to these flows would be detrimental to the global economy." I really wish that this wasn’t true, but our economy simply cannot function without plastic.

So what are we going to do now? Every industry on the entire planet is going to be affected by the supply chain disruptions that are occurring. In India, the textile industry has been “completely paralyzed” by this war… "Apocalyptic economic fallout. NHK confirms Trump’s disastrous war has completely paralyzed India’s massive textile industry. With 90% of their LPG imports choked off at the Strait of Hormuz, HALF A MILLION workers just lost their jobs. The global supply chain is collapsing."

If this war keeps going for an extended period of time, things will only get worse from here. In other words, enjoy this moment, because this is the best that conditions are going to be for quite a while.

Personally, I am more concerned about global food supplies than anything else. According to the United Nations, the number of people around the world experiencing “acute hunger” was at the highest level ever recorded even before this war erupted. Now farmers all over the northern hemisphere can’t get the nitrogen fertilizer that they desperately need because it is locked up in the Middle East…"Fertilizer is the link between energy and food. Natural gas is not just a fuel; it is the primary feedstock for synthetic nitrogen fertilizers through a process developed over a century ago called the Haber–Bosch method. Natural gas goes in, ammonia comes out, ammonia becomes urea, urea gets spread on cornfields in Iowa and wheat fields in Kansas and rice paddies in Asia. About 80 percent of nitrogen fertilizer production costs are attributable to natural gas. When the Strait of Hormuz is practically shuttered, you do not just block oil tankers and LNG carriers. You block the ships carrying urea and ammonia that the world’s farmers were expecting to receive this spring.

The numbers are sobering. The Persian Gulf region accounts for roughly a third of globally traded urea exports and approximately 25 percent of ammonia trade. Qatar’s state fertilizer company - QAFCO, considered the world’s largest urea supplier - shut down its plant when gas was cut. Saudi Arabia and other Gulf producers have seen exports stall. China, the other major global fertilizer exporter, has restricted outbound shipments to protect its domestic supply. These two supply sources together represent a substantial share of the global market, and both are simultaneously constrained."

For now, we are still eating food that was produced in 2025. So everything still seems fine. But in the not too distant future, annual crops such as wheat, barley and corn are going to be much more expensive. Meanwhile, crops that do not have to be planted every year such as olives and grapes will not be seriously affected. Nitrogen fertilizer must be applied at the proper time or it won’t work. If the Strait of Hormuz opens up this summer, it won’t be possible to reverse the crop losses that we are facing. We need the Strait of Hormuz to be opened immediately, but that simply is not going to happen."

"How It Really Is, Always Was, And Always Will Be"

 

Jim Kunstler, "April 2026 Eyesore"

"April 2026 Eyesore"
by Jim Kunstler

"Behold: the proposed Donald J. Trump Presidential Library coming in for a landing on Biscayne Boulevard, Miami a few years hence. It is already catching a lot of TDS flak, and deservedly so, for its gilded grandiosity - including a gigantic golden statue of “47” himself inside somewhere, and the gold “Trump” brand logo plastered on the 47th floor. Mr. Trump has always been comedian, and this monument is, at least partly, a bit of trollery against his millions of hate-inflamed detractors, a 47-story middle finger (with a smile). All of that is too self-evident to belabor.

Don’t expect this library to house many books, either. Rather, the building is a combo temple/ museum, filled with artifacts and objects of worship, like the jumbo jet (of various Air Force Ones) to be installed in the ground floor entrance.

The more curious aspect of this project is its manifestation as a skyscraper. Such megastructures are just now going obsolete all over the world, and the world is stuck with them. Working from home, or the corner cafe, or just about anywhere, killed the need for organizing office work in this manner, and artificial intelligence is apt to sweep away countless middle-management, information handling jobs in any case. Another skyscraper is just not what the world needs these days.

So, you’d also have to ask: aside from exhibit halls, study rooms, and auditoriums, what the heck else is expected to occupy the many other floors of the building? Document storage makes more sense in low-slung structures (filing cabinets are heavy) or underground, with elaborate climate-control. Is the plan to offer some upper floor market rental space to companies who might want to locate at a “prestige address?” But, we’ve already established that the traditional office milieu is on its way out.

The answer probably is that building skyscrapers is just what DJT did in life, besides being president of the USA twice. It’s what he knows how to do, and this scheme reflects on the triumphs of his prior career in real estate development. Really, it’s just another Trump Tower, perhaps, ultimately, another Trump hotel for folks who want to bask in the glow of the Golden Golem of Greatness and his legendary doings. The final joke is that it’s being financed with the awards from the various lawsuits Mr. T has won against the old legacy media giants who defamed him over years. For all that, we say GO, MAGA!"

"The President's Prophet, and the Pentagon's High Priest Predict Armageddon!" (Excerpt)

"The President's Prophet, and the
 Pentagon's High Priest Predict Armageddon!"
by David Haggith

Excerpt: "This may start off sounding like an Easter religious piece, but it’s not. It’s just that Trump’s presidentially appointed prophet evoked Easter this week to boost the president and his war, so I think even readers who normally have no interest in Easter will be interested in this revelation of the religious cult that originally empowered Donald Trump to the White House (both times) and that now nurtures and drives his zeal on a daily basis for the present war with Iran.

When I say “cult,” I’m not being derogatory, I am using the word according its actual definition: "A religious sect generally considered to be extremist or false, with its followers often living in an unconventional manner under the guidance of an authoritarian, charismatic leader."

No leader is more powerful in the world today or more authoritarian than Donald Trump, who does everything now by decree and who is also certainly charismatic with his huge love for large public rallies and for creating daily drama in the media whenever he can, and big shows that are always centered on himself.

While there is no doubt that Trump alone rules MAGA, he is bizarrely guided by his high priestess of the White House, Paula White‑Cain, who is a self-declared prophetess, regularly claiming she speaks for God. White-Cain merits attention because she holds an actual office in the White House, putting her in influence at the top seat of global government, and Trump seriously listens to her spiritual counsel and basks in her frequent flowing praise at a level of adoration and is empowered by the large audience she has captured.

During the present Holy Week, White-Cain presented a disturbing reason for all of us to take a serious look at her position in the White House and at her prophecies when she stirred up considerable backlash by speaking at an Easter lunch at the White House on Holy Wednesday, comparing the persecutions and “betrayals” endured by Donald Trump to those of Jesus Christ.

While she did not say (nor appear to believe) that Donald Trump is the second coming of Jesus Christ (a common denominator of a number of fringe cults over past decades), she has called the White House “holy ground” and also said that “to say no to President Trump would be saying no to God” - not because she is claiming Trump IS God but because she believes he is divinely directed by God as one appointed by God to carry out what she and other self-proclaimed prophets in this movement claim are God’s divine mandates.

These imperial mandates are apocalyptic in nature, and the Dominion Theology they are based on is the theology that drove the crusades, the inquisitions, and other religious wars - the belief that Christians are to rule a global empire as Christ’s stand-ins until he returns. It has long been the most dangerous belief on earth because people have never handled that power well. Her comparison of Trump to Christ with words Trump clearly basked in as he stood behind her hit such a level of obscenity that her brief speech raised religious rebuffs all over the world.

What I want to call attention to is how her words this week reveal a seriously dangerous cultic core of MAGA. Not only has this group, which is the heart of MAGA, ensconced White-Cain, a televangelist and leader in the charismatic movement, in an office in the White House; but it has infused the Pentagon top brass with an actual outspoken drive to bring on Armageddon in order to facilitate the return of Jesus Christ! I mean “outspoken” in the sense that numerous military leaders have been reported during the Iran War as actually using Armageddon as a call to arms against Iran. We’re going to look at both White-Cain and the Pentagon’s new High Priest Hegseth’s apocalyptic crusade, and note that they are the ones deploying the terminology of apocalypse. White-Cain’s official title is Senior Advisor to the White House Faith Office. (You can read more about her in the following article beyond just the part I present below from her brief talk.)

That is why I say I am not using the word “cult” in the pejorative way it has often been used when we hear people talking about all of MAGA as being the “Trump cult.” This core group really is a cult with an office in the White House. Her words this week reveal how truly twisted around the person of Donald Trump as their charismatic leader—like ivy around a great tree—this religious core MAGA group is: (I use the word “core” because, while she leads a following that has been the heart of MAGA since its inception, empowering Trump with millions of Christian voters, I realize she does not speak for all of MAGA any more than for all Christians. Far from it.)

Here is what she said on Holy Wednesday in anticipation of Easter: "With the president standing behind her, and to whom she turned to address personally, White-Cain said: “Jesus taught so many lessons through his death, burial and resurrection. He showed us great leadership, great transformation, requires great sacrifice. And Mr President, no one has paid the price like you have paid the price. It almost cost you your life. You were betrayed and arrested and falsely accused. It’s a familiar pattern that our lord and savior showed us,” she said."

"But it didn’t end there for him, and it didn’t end there for you,” she said. “God always had a plan: On the third day, he rose, he defeated evil, he conquered death, hell and the grave. And because he rose, we all know that we can rise. And sir, because of his resurrection, you rose up,” she added. "Because he was victorious, you are victorious. And I believe that the Lord said to tell you this: because of his victory, you will be victorious in all you put your hands to,” she said, finishing to applause." The president responded by smiling and said “thank you.”

This is the kind of crowning glory any narcissistic megalomaniac would crave to feed his tiny walnut of an ego that seeks to expand its withered center into a larger-than-life projection of what he wants to believe he is. Her words don’t quite deify Trump, but they come awfully close by saying that anything he does (most particularly right now in the war against Iran, which was her context) will be made victorious by God because Trump has suffered just like Jesus did. At other times, she has told the president and all those gathered at her meetings that Trump is God’s “anointed.”
Full, most disturbing article is here:

"Happy Resurrection Day"

Burnland, "Les Disciples"
"Happy Resurrection Day"
by Patti Johnson

"He is risen!" The Disciples Peter and John Running to the Sepulchre on the Morning of the Resurrection. This iconic work captures the dramatic moment when Peter and John, having heard Mary Magdalene’s astonishing news that Jesus’ tomb was empty, race toward it in a surge of hope and disbelief. I chose this painting because I was deeply moved by Burnand’s portrayal of the Apostles’ intense expressions. Their eyes are wide with urgent, hopeful questioning: “Could it truly be? Our Savior lives?” The raw emotion in their faces, combined with the dynamic sense of motion, makes this one of the most powerful depictions of Easter morning."

Happy Easter!

Happy Easter!
o
Royal Scots Dragoon Guards, "Amazing Grace"
o
A must-view video! Turn sound on.

Saturday, April 4, 2026

"Know Your Adversary… Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei, Not a Fortunate Son"

"Know Your Adversary… 
Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei, Not a Fortunate Son"
by Larry C. Johnson

"I say adversary instead of enemy. Mr. Khamenei and the Iranian people are not the enemies of the US. They did not attack us on February 28, we attacked them… And we did so while the Iranians were engaged in good faith negotiations, or so they thought. Iran’s new Ayatollah shares something in common with President John F. Kennedy and President George H. W. Bush… He’s a combat veteran.

Since 1960, the United States has only had two presidents who actually fought in a war… In the case of Kennedy and Bush that was World War II. I concede that Kennedy played a key role in fanning the flames of the Vietnam war but, before he was murdered, he reportedly was going to put an end to the US role. George H.W. Bush oversaw the first invasion of Iraq in 1991, but he at least made sure the US confined itself to ejecting Iraq from Kuwait. The rest of the lot, the ones who embroiled the US in subsequent needless wars, had zero combat experience. Donald “Bone Spurs” Trump avoided serving in Vietnam. He was too wealthy and entitled to be bothered with enlisting in the Army or the Marine Corps… Just another Fortunate Son:
I think it is important that the American people understand that Mojtaba Khameni was a 17 year old boy from a privileged family - sort of like Baron Trump - who ignored his father, enlisted, fought on the front lines in that war with Iraq and was wounded. He absolutely knows the cost of war.

Mojtaba Khamenei (full name: Mojtaba Hosseini Khamenei, born September 8, 1969, in Mashhad, Iran) is the second son of the late Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. He served as a teenager in the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) during the final years of the Iran-Iraq War (1980–1988). Just a reminder… The US played a critical role in helping Iraq attack Iran by providing the chemicals used to make chemical weapons and by providing intelligence to the Iraqi General Staff.

Mojtaba joined the IRGC around 1987 (some accounts say 1986) after completing secondary school, at approximately age 17. He was from a privileged family and, by virtue of his age, could have stayed home. But he chose to fight for his country against a foe that had launched a war of aggression against Iran at the behest of the Untied States. This was during the later stages of the war, when Iran was conducting offensives and facing Iraqi counterattacks. He was assigned to the Habib ibn Mazahir Battalion (also spelled Habib bin Muzahir or Habib Ibn Mazaher) within the 27th Mohammad Rasulullah Division of the IRGC Ground Forces. This unit consisted largely of ideologically committed volunteers and operated on the western front. The battalion’s name references a companion of Imam Hussein from the Battle of Karbala, reflecting the religious-martyrdom ethos common in IRGC units.

Mojtaba saw real combat. One account mentions he went “missing” at one point during the recapture of Mehran (a border town that changed hands multiple times). Details on specific combat roles, injuries, or awards remain limited. Public accounts indicate he participated in several IRGC operations, including:

Operation Mersad (1988), the final major battle of the war, which involved repelling an Iraqi-backed Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK) incursion into Iran.

Operation Beit ol-Moqaddas 2, 3, and 4 (part of a series of offensives aimed at recapturing territory).

Operation Valfajr 10 (Dawn 10), a major Iranian offensive in 1988.

Mojtaba’s service in the Habib Battalion helped him build lasting personal and institutional ties within the IRGC. Many comrades from this period later rose to senior positions in Iran’s security, intelligence, and military apparatus (including figures like Hossein Taeb, who headed IRGC intelligence, and others associated with Qassem Soleimani’s circle). These wartime relationships are widely viewed as a foundational element of his influence in Iran’s hardline and security networks.

After the war ended in 1988 with Iran’s acceptance of a UN ceasefire, Mojtaba shifted focus to religious studies in Qom and later assumed behind-the-scenes roles. He has maintained strong connections to the IRGC and Basij (where he reportedly held a command role in later years), but his wartime service is often highlighted in Iranian narratives as evidence of his revolutionary credentials. Unlike Donald Trump, who only knows war through the movies he watches, Mojtaba Khamenei learned at a young age the horrors of war and the sacrifice it entails. Keep that in mind in the coming days."

"April 6 Predictions: The 48 Hours That Will Decide Everything!"

Prof. Jiang Xueqin, 4/4/26
"April 6 Predictions: 
The 48 Hours That Will Decide Everything!"
"Trump's deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz expires. Three scenarios possible:
(1) Diplomatic breakthrough (15-20% probability) - oil crashes to $70-80, S&P 500 rallies 10-15%.
(2) Deadline extension (45-50% probability) - oil stays $100-120, recession probability crosses 50%, prolonged uncertainty.
(3) Military escalation (30-35% probability) - oil surges to $150-200, S&P 500 enters bear market, global recession, fertilizer crisis becomes catastrophic.

This analysis covers all three scenarios with probabilities, economic mathematics, the hidden fertilizer/food crisis threatening global food security, what April 6 really means politically, and what you should do now. The next 48 hours determine the economic trajectory for the rest of 2026."
Comments here:

"Your Friends Need Your Money And Food, The Party Is Over; All Hell Will Reign Down In 48 Hours"

Jeremiah Babe, 4/4/26
"Your Friends Need Your Money And Food, 
The Party Is Over; All Hell Will Reign Down In 48 Hours"
Comments here:

"Americans Warned: A Dangerous Summer Is Coming"

Full screen recommended.
Snyder Reports, 4/4/26
"Americans Warned: 
A Dangerous Summer Is Coming"
Comments here:

Musical Interlude: 2002, “Cycle Of Time”

Full screen recommended.
2002, “Cycle Of Time”

Beautiful...