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Wednesday, May 20, 2026

"You're Living Through The Quiet Fall Of The American Empire"

Full screen recommended.
Finance Economist, 5/20/26
"You're Living Through The 
Quiet Fall Of The American Empire"
"For the first time since the Great Depression, more people are leaving the United States than coming in. 180,000 citizens emigrated last year. The renunciation queue is 30,000 deep. The wealthy are selling million-dollar homes to move abroad. A veteran sleeps in a storage unit. 54% of adults read below a sixth-grade level. The dollar just hit its lowest reserve share since 1995. The Treasury declared the country insolvent. And every empire in history collapsed the exact same way from the inside."
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Jeffrey Sachs, 5/20/26
"This Is The End"
Comments here:

Musical Interlude: Deuter, "Sea and Silence"

Deuter, "Sea and Silence"

"A Look to the Heavens"

"The small, northern constellation Triangulum harbors this magnificent face-on spiral galaxy, M33. Its popular names include the Pinwheel Galaxy or just the Triangulum Galaxy. M33 is over 50,000 light-years in diameter, third largest in the Local Group of galaxies after the Andromeda Galaxy (M31), and our own Milky Way. About 3 million light-years from the Milky Way, M33 is itself thought to be a satellite of the Andromeda Galaxy and astronomers in these two galaxies would likely have spectacular views of each other's grand spiral star systems.
As for the view from planet Earth, this sharp image shows off M33's blue star clusters and pinkish star forming regions along the galaxy's loosely wound spiral arms. In fact, the cavernous NGC 604 is the brightest star forming region, seen here at about the 4 o'clock position from the galaxy center. Like M31, M33's population of well-measured variable stars have helped make this nearby spiral a cosmic yardstick for establishing the distance scale of the Universe."

"Remember..."

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

Paulo Coelho, "Walking the Path"

"Walking the Path"
by Paulo Coelho

"I reckon that it takes about three minutes to read my text. Well, according to statistics, in that same short period of time 300 people will die and another 620 will be born. It takes me perhaps half an hour to write a text: here I sit, concentrating on my computer, books piled up beside me, ideas in my head, the scenery passing by outside my window. Everything seems perfectly normal all around me; and yet, during these thirty minutes, 3,000 people have died and 6,200 have just seen the light of the world for the first time.

Where are all those thousands of families who have just begun to weep over the loss of some dear one, or else laugh at the arrival of a son, grandson or brother? I stop and reflect for a while: perhaps many of these deaths are reaching the end of a long, painful sickness, and some persons are relieved that the Angel has come for them. Besides these, in all certainty hundreds of children who have just been born will be abandoned in a minute and transferred to the death statistics before I finish this text.

What a thought! A simple statistic that I came upon by chance and all of a sudden I can feel all those losses and encounters, smiles and tears. How many are leaving this life, alone in their rooms, without anyone realizing what is going on? How many will be born in secret, only to be abandoned at the door of shelters or convents? And then I reflect that I was part of the birth statistics and one day I will be included in the toll of the dead. How good that is to be fully aware that I am going to die. Ever since I took the road to Santiago I have understood that although life goes on and we are eternal, one day this existence will come to an end.

People think very little about death. They spend their lives worried about really absurd things, putting things off and leaving important moments aside. They risk nothing because they believe that is dangerous. They grumble a lot, but act like cowards when it is time to take certain steps. They want everything to change, but they themselves refuse to change. If they thought a little more about death, they would never fail to make that telephone call that they have been putting off. They would be a little more crazy. They would not be afraid of the end of this incarnation because you cannot be afraid of something that is going to happen anyway.

The Indians say: "Today is as good a day as any other to leave this world." And a sorcerer once remarked: "May death be always sitting beside you. That way, when you have to do something important, it will give you the strength and courage you need." I hope, reader, that you have accompanied me this far. It would be silly to let the subject scare you, because sooner or later we are all going to die. And only those who accept this are prepared for life."
o
"We're all going to die. We don't get much say over how or when, but we do get to decide how we're gonna live. So, do it. Decide. Is this the life you want to live? Is this the person you want to love? Is this the best you can be? Can you be stronger? Kinder? More compassionate? Decide. Breathe in. Breathe out and decide."
- "Richard", "Grey's Anatomy"

"Meet Joe Black"

“Death twitches my ear; 'Live,' he says...
'I am coming.” - Virgil

"Meet Joe Black"
Bill Parrish (Anthony Hopkins) enters his office and begins speaking to a voice that materializes into a person by the name of Death (Brad Pitt). Death knows Bill is struggling with his mortality, so Death offers Bill time in exchange for acting as his tour guide.
Full screen recommended for all.
"Bill Meets Joe"

"Death Meets with Cancer Patient in Hospital"

"Enough Pictures?"

The final speech from Anthony Hopkins,
“65 years, don’t they go by in a blink?"

"'That Next Place', Final scene."

Food for thought...

"Life's Impermanence..."

"Life's impermanence, I realized, is what makes every
single day so precious. It's what shapes our time here.
It's what makes it so important that not a single moment be wasted."
- Wes Moore

The Poet: Czesław Miłosz , “A Song On The End Of The World”

“A Song On The End Of The World”

"This poem was written in Warsaw in 1944. Czesław Miłosz ( 30 June 1911 – 14 August 2004) was a Polish-American poet, prose writer, translator, and diplomat. Regarded as one of the great poets of the 20th century, he won the 1980 Nobel Prize in Literature. In its citation, the Swedish Academy called Miłosz a writer who "voices man's exposed condition in a world of severe conflicts".

Miłosz survived the German occupation of Warsaw during World War II and became a cultural attaché for the Polish government during the postwar period. When communist authorities threatened his safety, he defected to France and ultimately chose exile in the United States, where he became a professor at the University of California, Berkeley. His poetry - particularly about his wartime experience—and his appraisal of Stalinism in a prose book, "The Captive Mind," brought him renown as a leading émigré artist and intellectual.

Throughout his life and work, Miłosz tackled questions of morality, politics, history, and faith. As a translator, he introduced Western works to a Polish audience, and as a scholar and editor, he championed a greater awareness of Slavic literature in the West. Faith played a role in his work as he explored his Catholicism and personal experience. Miłosz died in Kraków, Poland, in 2004. He is interred in Skałka, a church known in Poland as a place of honor for distinguished Poles."

“A Song On The End Of The World”

“On the day the world ends
A bee circles a clover,
A fisherman mends a glimmering net.
Happy porpoises jump in the sea,
By the rainspout young sparrows are playing
And the snake is gold-skinned as it should always be.

On the day the world ends
Women walk through the fields under their umbrellas,
A drunkard grows sleepy at the edge of a lawn,
Vegetable peddlers shout in the street
And a yellow-sailed boat comes nearer the island,
The voice of a violin lasts in the air
And leads into a starry night.

And those who expected lightning and thunder
Are disappointed.
And those who expected signs and archangels’ trumps
Do not believe it is happening now.
As long as the sun and the moon are above,
As long as the bumblebee visits a rose,
As long as rosy infants are born
No one believes it is happening now.

Only a white-haired old man, who would be a prophet
Yet is not a prophet, for he’s much too busy,
Repeats while he binds his tomatoes:
There will be no other end of the world,
There will be no other end of the world.”

~  Czeslaw Milosz

The Daily "Near You?"

Kansas City, Kansas, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"You Can Never Again Say..."

There but for the grace of God go you and I...

 

"Great Was It's Fall"

"Great Was It's Fall"
by Edward Curtin

"When it comes, it comes on slowly
The day feels holy, a hush falls down
Whispered names, remembered faces
From desperate places, all gather ‘round"
Tom Paxton, “Come on, Holy”

"Early morning and the first heavy snow is falling. It is beautiful. I walk around the lake in the holy hush. Alone except for two newly arrived ducks swimming on an open patch of icing water. When I stop to watch them, the soft sound of the falling snow grows gradually louder, beating drums, like truly listening to Beethoven, not the lionized one, about whose honored status James Agee wrote “is the one surest sign of fatal misunderstanding, and is the kiss of Judas,” but the Beethoven whose music you won’t hear nicely but will hurt you and for which you should be glad.

Although I have come here to flee for an interlude the sound of the world’s anguish and to contemplate its beauty, I am deflected, as usual. How could I not be? Isn’t it true as the poet Rilke said, that “beauty is nothing but the beginning of terror,” and we, with all our strange thoughts inside us, try to swallow the sobs that accompany all our joys. My brother-in-law died unexpectedly a few days ago. I watch the ducks swim so placidly in circles and I wonder.

I realize that my thoughts are meaningless to most but me, a minor writer in a world of screamers, yet I record them here to learn what I may think and to share with a few other human souls the musings of a distraught man in a world made mad and running red like a butcher’s bench with the blood of the innocent shed by ruthless people. I am old but hope I am forever young with a strong foundation that will help me find some insights along this path. Who knows?

I have spent many decades lost in beauty and an intense scholar’s study of the propaganda the world’s rulers use to convince the gullible that their intentions are pure and their actions are carried out for the common good. Few have heeded my findings. Why should they?

While the rulers’ endless lies should be apparent, they are not, for too many people have built their own lives upon foundations made of sand, and though they are shaking, few believe they will fall. And to think the official doll’s house of fabricated reality within which they dwell and upon whose words they build their lives will also fall – that is deemed impossible.

William Saroyan, in his 1939 play “The Time of Your Life,” (winner of both the Pulitzer Prize for Drama and the New York Drama Critics Circle Award) has a minor character, the Arab, repeat, “No foundation. All the way down the line.” That is all he has to say. “No foundation. All the way down the line.” Concise and cutting to the bone. True then, but much, much truer now.

Then came World War II and the defeat of Germany, Japan, and their allies with the United States dropping atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki after fire-bombing Tokyo, Dresden, Cologne and dozens of other Japanese and German cities, intentionally killing vast numbers of civilians.

And if that wasn’t enough, the future CIA Director Allen Dulles, James Jesus Angleton, and colleagues brought nearly 2,000 Nazis scientists, engineers, biological weapons experts to the U.S. to work in government programs, while helping thousands more flee justice by helping them escape to South America and other places along the “rat lines.”

Thus the U.S. became the evil they denounced in others, and it could rightly be said Hitler triumphed in defeat. Upon this evil foundation, which is now crumbling, the U.S. empire was built despite its alleged Christian underpinnings.

There’s an old saying: "And everyone who hears these words of mine and does not do them will be like a foolish man who built his house on the sand. And the rain fell, and the floods came, and the winds blew and beat against that house, and it fell, and great was the fall of it. And when Jesus finished these sayings, the crowds were astonished at his teaching, for he was teaching them as one who had authority, and not as their scribes." Mathew 7:21-29

Being alone on my walk helps me focus on the elementary truth that we are all mortal and that beauty is terrifying since it evokes the anguish of its and our endings. And when we go, end, pass on, or die – take your pick – all the secret thoughts, hopes, memories, lives, and dreams we have had will vanish with us, if we have not, while living, found a way to tell the truths we harbor in our secret hearts. We will be but mysterious melodies others might hum without grasping our lyrics, as the Gershwin brothers referenced in their song “They Can’t Take that Away From Me.” Our melodies may linger on for a while once our songs have ended, as the songwriter says, but who we really were will vanish with us into the mists of time.

In quiet moments of timeless reflection, everyone knows we are complex creatures; just as they quickly don their masquerades when time resumes to face the faces that they face to deny such complexity.

When I left the ducks to their circle games, I continued on my way along the lake. The snow blew from the north into my face and made it hard to see. The lake and the neighboring woods disappeared and so did my thoughts as I constantly wiped my eyes of snow. But I felt a certain joy beyond telling.

As the snow and wind eased up, I saw up a hill through a cut in the woods a large doe with her three fawns grazing under some sheltering pine trees on posted property owned by a local college. A smart mother, I thought, since I knew shotgun deer hunting season was underway.

It was then that the hushed peace of the morning was broken by a few shotgun blasts from the western woods. Did the doe and her fawns, who in days past I would often meet and converse with at very close range along the road, take heed? Can such creatures learn to avoid men with guns? Why were the hunters on the prowl for deer to kill? Did they need the meat to eat, or did they just get their kicks from the killing and slicing and gutting of once living creatures who never did them any harm?

I wondered – and leave that wondering to you – as my mind turned to the genocide in Gaza and the murder of the innocent in so many other places by men with guns and weapons more amazing in their killing power, manufactured in spotless factories by people indifferent to how their bread is buttered. But I knew that the workers on the factory floors were no more guilty than those whose butter comes from investments in these ghoulish places. Yes, Thoreau knew: "Do not ask how your bread is buttered, it will make you sick if you do – and the like. A man had better starve at once than lose his innocence in the process of getting his bread. If within the sophisticate man there is not an unsophisticated one, then he is but one of the devil’s angels."

When I was about four years old, I went with my mother to the local butcher shop. When Sol the butcher came to wait on my mother, I noticed his white apron was covered in blood, so I asked him if he cut himself. He laughed and asked me if I would like a slice of liverwurst. Didn’t Hitler claim to be a vegetarian because of animal suffering?

The shotgun blasts increased on my way home. I stopped to gather some long-needle pine and wild red berry branches for our mantle since it was December and the birth of the Prince of Peace was approaching. My knife slipped and I cut my finger, the blood dripping onto the white snow matched the berries’ redness. It was startlingly beautiful, but the cut was painful as I stanched it with a few tissues.

When I got home and was bandaging my finger and my wife was decorating our mantle with my cuttings, I recalled an analysis of our current situation offered by the French demographer, Emmanuel Todd, “The Dislocation of the West.”

Todd is an all facts guy, an historian, a sociologist, a middle-of the roader, far from a romantic dreamer, an analyst of the extensive data that he gathers. Years back, based on data analysis, he correctly predicted the fall of the Soviet Union. Now he is predicting the fall of the West based on certain specific variables that he considers key. When I read his work and heard him talk, I concurred completely, for I had for years, based on my work in the sociology of religion, reached the same conclusion without all his data to back me up.

We in the West, he says, are living at a time when nihilism, meaninglessness, and zero religious belief is the norm. It has come on slowly over a century and a half to the point where nothing seems holy. We have passed from a Zombie religious state when traditional religious values, but not belief, survived somewhat, to a time when nihilism undergirds everything. A nihilistic foundation, meaning no foundation. Reality has been undermined and a zombie state of lostness prevails, and irrational pure evil state nihilism lives for endless war. Moral values have disappeared behind a façade of fake belief.

If Thoreau were around, he might ask people what they really believed about God, death, and moral values, and the stuttering responses would befit the times. But no one is asking. The song is over but only the melody lingers on, even as Bing Crosby sings “O Little Town of Bethlehem” on a cyber sale at Amazon.

Todd is a data man, a non-believer, a normal academic, and yet from his research he probably sounds to many as if he is unhinged. But he is just repeating what Jesus, Saroyan’s character, and the Protestant theologian Paul Tillich (in 1948) all said was happening with the shaking and undermining of the Western foundation. Hell would break loose. Nihilism would triumph.

And it did, of course, and will unless... I don’t know; Todd has no answer. "I think of all the blood in the woods, on the tracks, all the blood being shed everywhere, the killers licking their chops, the earth indifferently drinking all the blood, and the words of the French poet Jacques Prevert’s “Song in the Blood”:

"Where’s it going all this spilled blood?
Murder’s blood, war’s blood, misery’s blood,
And the blood of men tortured in prisons,
And the blood of children calmly tortured by their papa and their mama,
And the blood of men whose heads bleed in padded cells,
And the roofers blood when the roofer slips and falls from the roof,
And the blood that comes and flows in great gushes with the newborn,
The mother cries,
The baby cries,
The blood flows,
The earth turns,
The earth doesn’t stop turning,
The blood doesn’t stop flowing,
Where’s it going all this spilled blood?
Blood of the blackjacked,
Of the humiliated,
Of suicides,
Of firing squad victims,
Of the condemned,
And the blood of those that die just like that by accident."

But then my wife suggested that Todd and I may be wrong. When religious belief was strong in the West, weren’t nations and people slaughtering their enemies in the name of religion? Don’t many social scientists use data to argue points that lack counterpoints? Haven’t people long been fanatical killers in the name of religion and for their gods? When did morals or religious belief ever stop the shedding of blood? Such times are few and far between. Perhaps religious belief is not the explanatory variable that Todd thinks it is and seemed so to me when I first read his work and even concurred with it a few minutes ago.

Could not the key be that mysterious human attribute – love – that like despair cannot be measured, that finds in every other living creature a part of oneself, just the inkling in our hearts that everyone is us and should always be treated as an end and not a means, especially at a time when the spiritual has been subordinated to the technical, everything has become means, and the ends have disappeared.

It may sound laughable to suggest that Fyodor Dostoevsky explained it better than all the data gatherers in his story “The Dream of A Ridiculous Man”: "It is so simple: in one day, in one hour, everything would be settled at once. The one thing is – love thy neighbor as thyself – that is the one thing. That is all, nothing else is needed. You will instantly find how to live."

Or as Jesus said and other great religious leaders affirmed: "Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and have not charity [love], I am become as sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal." - Corinthians 13

Who can explain it? Who can tell you why? Not this fool. I can only wonder as I wander in the beautiful falling snow. Like Dostoevsky, “I will not, I cannot believe that evil is the normal condition of men. Yet all of them only laugh at my belief.” It’s understandable."
"The Dislocation of The West", by Emmanuel Todd, here:

"The Average Person in America Is Running Out of Money'

Full screen recommended.
The Unfolded States, 5/20/26
"The Average Person in America
 Is Running Out of Money'
"The average person in America is feeling more financial pressure than they did just a few years ago. Rising housing costs, expensive groceries, higher insurance premiums, growing debt, and stagnant purchasing power are reshaping everyday life for millions of households. In this video, we break down why so many working Americans feel financially stretched despite low unemployment and continued economic growth. From housing affordability and credit card debt to wage pressure and the changing reality facing Millennials and Gen Z, this documentary-style analysis explores how the modern cost of living crisis is affecting the American middle class. We also examine why younger generations are delaying homeownership, relying more on side income, and struggling to build long-term financial stability in today’s economy. Sources referenced throughout this video include the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), Federal Reserve, Redfin, Apartment List, Realtor.com, New York Federal Reserve, Census Bureau, and publicly available economic reporting and consumer data."
Commente here:

"McDonald's Collapse Is Bigger Than You Think As It Causes A Fundamental Issue With Local Economies"

Full screen recommended.
The Economic Ninja, 5/20/26
"McDonald's Collapse Is Bigger Than You Think As It 
Causes A Fundamental Issue With Local Economies"
McDonald's CEO has admitted to a double-digit sales drop among lower-income customers, with middle-income sales also significantly declining. This marks the first sales decrease for the company in years, impacting locations geographically and reflecting broader economic challenges for the fast food industry. The shift in fast food sales indicates a significant change in consumer spending habits and the overall economy, suggesting that many people are struggling with their money."
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
In Plain Bite, 5/20/26
"10 US Restaurant Chains Customers Can't 
Stand Anymore (And 2 Rising Stars)"
"Eight thousand restaurants wiped off the map - and the people who did it still collected dividends. Most people assume the restaurant chains they grew up with are still the same companies they remember. Same food. Same values. Same deal. But when you trace the ownership behind the signs, follow the money behind the menu boards, and read the bankruptcy filings most customers never see, a very different picture starts to emerge. And in some cases, the people running these chains have already decided you are not the customer they are building for anymore. Some of these brands have served millions of loyal customers for decades. But once you start looking at who actually owns them today, what happened to the food, and why thousands of locations have quietly disappeared, the story behind the familiar signs becomes much harder to ignore. 

A few of what we found will surprise even people who thought they already knew what was happening. In this video, you will discover which chains are still delivering real value, which ones quietly changed the deal without telling you, what private equity ownership actually looks like on your receipt, and two chains that are doing the exact opposite of everything on this list. The most surprising part of this video? One chief executive broke two separate chains in the same year — collected nearly a hundred million dollars doing it - and is still running a company you probably visited this week. If you want to know what is actually happening behind the counter before you spend another dollar, subscribe to In Plain Bite and turn on notifications. Every video goes behind the menu, behind the marketing, and behind the ownership to show you what the press releases leave out."
Comments here:

"How It Really Is"

 

"The Worst Invention of All Time?"

"The Worst Invention of All Time?"
by J.D. Breen

"We love to mind each other’s business. And, unlike our benighted ancestors of a hundred years ago, we have just the tool to do it. I’m holding it in my hand, and most of you have it in yours. Has any century started worse than this one?

It’s a question typical of our short-sighted, self-centered, attention-deprived age. The answer seems obvious, and can be sought by looking a hundred years into the rearview mirror. There we see… closer than they appear… Theodore Roosevelt, the San Francisco Earthquake, the Federal Reserve, the income tax, the direct election of Senators, Woodrow Wilson, the Great War, the Russian Revolution, the Spanish Flu, the Treaty of Versailles, the Black Sox, and Prohibition.

Peak America: But let’s give this century its ignominious due. It has its own litany of self-inflicted calamity, exacted by meddling sculptors and know-it-all painters whose only tools are jackhammers and spray guns. And, to be fair, their work isn’t done!

In retrospect, the 1990s might have been Peak America… the blowoff top of a great bacchanal. The Soviets fell and prosperity reigned. History was at an end. The party was on. The US then succumbed to what economics calls the law of diminishing returns, and approached what Calculus refers to as the limit.

After running up the credit card and hitting the casino, America raided mom’s wine cellar and ransacked dad’s liquor cabinet. Then it passed out on the lawn, empty bottles and smoldering cigarettes strewn across the yard as the morning sprinkler sprayed its face. It’s been hungover and searching for its car keys ever since. Along the way, it’s tripped and stumbled into expensive errors. Thousands died in reckless wars. Millions were impoverished by rigged capital markets. Lockdowns closed countless small businesses while enriching big competitors. Medical mandates evicted millions from jobs.

And many Americans are just fine with this refrain of disaster that resembles a classic Bradbury book or a bad Billy Joel song. The Fourth Turning seems to be upon us. Not only is the pretense of liberty vanishing, the desire for it seems to be as well. Live and let live is dead. To each his own is not for us.

Sunlight to an Ant: We love to mind each other’s business. And, unlike our benighted ancestors of a hundred years ago, we have just the tool to do it. I’m holding it in my hand, and most of you have it in yours.

This century, we’ve become an hysterical people. Everything is over the top, overdone, overblown, and overreacted to. Even (or especially) regarding people we never met and would never care to meet, or things we know nothing about and about which, in a sane world, we’d not be able to care less.

The smartphone brings “news” to us the way a magnifying glass transmits sunlight to an ant. It hits us more intensely, and less beneficially, than we initially believe. It allows little or no time to think, and often leaves us worse off than had we not been exposed to it at all. We receive so much information that we usually know less than we did before. Our brains slowly fry.

Public opinion can be defined as what everyone thinks everyone else thinks, which inevitably influences what people think they are supposed to think. The smartphone fans these flames, which often burn out as quickly as they ignite.

Silent and Listen: Social media and instant news are not conducive to subtlety and nuance, but rather to instant reaction and plenty of noise. Smartphones stunt reflection and shorten time horizons. It’s appropriate that “silent” and “listen” are spelled with the same letters. But in social settings, our phones encourage the former yet discourage the latter. They “connect” us superficially from a distance, yet push us apart in proximity.

A random buzz, beep, post, photo, like, link, text, or tweet is sufficient pretext to disrupt a conversation or ignore someone in our presence. Digital correspondents become highest priority. The world of the real, the tangible, and the personal fades into the background. And, after wading mindlessly thru the self-selected cheer and artificial abundance of other people’s posts, it often feels inadequate.

Don’t get me wrong. The smartphone is one of the most useful, powerful, consequential, disruptive, convenient, informative, miraculous, and remarkable inventions of all time. But in some ways, it is among the worst. Like most anything else, it just depends how we use it. Or don’t."

"Weapons Of Mass Distraction And Booze Jokes"

Several generations, actually...
"Weapons Of Mass Distraction And Booze Jokes"
by John Wilder

"2026 is the 24th year of the smart phone, as the CrackBerry® was introduced way back in 2002. To put that into perspective, 23 years before 2002, Jimmy Carter was president and Hillary Clinton had only eaten six children.

But the BlackBerry© didn’t take over immediately – it was mainly a hit with the executive-set at first, since it allowed them to get emails while they were on the slopes at Gstaad or write ANGRY EMAILS IN ALL CAPS while munching on bigfoot filet roasted over Moonrocks at the beach down in Monaco.

The real killer smart phone, though, was the iPhone©. It was introduced just 18 years ago in 2007. The design standards for the iPhone™ quickly became the standard for cell phones, and it knocked BlackBerry® into oblivion within just a few short years because teenaged girls liked it much better because, selfies. To be fair, it was a pretty big jump in functionality and aesthetics.

The impact, though, of smart phones, however, is undeniable. They became the single most effective way to distract a person. Ever. You’ve seen the effect enough that it’s cliché – walk into a restaurant and it’s not a group of people talking to each other. Instead, it’s a group of people eating near each other while they take in content produced with the explicit objective of taking over their attention.

And, it has certainly worked if the goal was to distract. People now spend more time doomscrolling on their phones than they spend with their children, spouses, and friends. Combined, and Tinder™ has led to more one-night stands than wine coolers.
The reason smartphones grab our attention is somewhat seductive: every time a new notification hits, it sets off a small hit of dopamine in the brain. Just like lab rats, we love our dopamine. And the designers know it. On earlier versions of Twitter©, if I got multiple “likes” on a Tweet®, they would be delayed and doled out so that the action-anticipation-reward loop was optimized to keep me engaged.

And the format of Twitter© (that X™ retained) of scrolling through content, why, something super interesting might be at the bottom of the next swipe of my finger on the screen. So, I’d better just go two more minutes. And then an hour goes by . . .

X© is an attention harvester – they built the perfect trap to stick the rat to the app. And so is Facebook™. And Instagram©. And Snapchat®. These are designed to meld into our nervous system, and keep our eyes focused on the screen, day after day. I know this, because it works, and it worked on me.

After I realized that, though, I decided on a strategy: I would jealously guard my attention like CNN™ guarded information on Joe Biden’s ability to remember, you know, the thing. The reasons are many: Information overload leads to depression and anxiety. I had to ask myself, “Can I do anything about this?” and “Is this something I really care about?”

Here’s where I draw the line: Consciously, I decided I really don’t care about Ukraine and Russia. And you can’t make me care about them. I also decided the same thing with Israel and Gaza. They’re not here, and if I’m going to spend my attention and emotion, I’d rather do something to make the United States better, first – like doing everything I can to get as many illegals deported as possible and shutting down as many H-1B visas as possible so maybe someone at a call center could be intelligible. Or I could spend my time spreading the word about the wonders of PEZ™.

I also make a conscious decision (mostly) on what media I’m going to consume and when. I do personal emails three times a week because my inbox isn’t a slot machine for spam. I browse non-news websites three times a week (mostly – there are exceptions).

I have, at least at my age, also decided that multitasking isn’t something I’m going to count on unless the task is really mindless. I try to focus more on just one thing at a time – then I’m really there. The problem in 2025 isn’t time management, it’s attention management. And I have to have time to:

Think deeply, so I’m not just reacting to stimulus and so I can better see propaganda. Honestly, I’ve gotten to the point that I don’t trust any media unless I can verify the claim.

Relax, so I’m not so wound up about things. Life shouldn’t be so tense. That’s what caffeine is for.

Create, because I really enjoy it, and because that’s the way that maybe I can change the world. Without distractions, I can crush out a first draft of a post in about an hour. Pounding and sanding the result takes one or two more, and then I gotta add memes. To do any of those things requires attention.

We are the sum of what we spend our attention and effort on. If I’m distracted, I know that I simply won’t have the focus I need in order to make the best decisions. Who, indeed, would like the American public distracted and not paying attention to what exactly is going on in the world?

Smartphones have become weapons of mass distraction. Yet each time we’re distracted by one, it’s the result of a choice. So, why let them win? I’ve got to look forward to 2048, 23 years into the future from now. I imagine Barron Trump will be in his third presidential term by then..."
Full screen recommended.
Steve Cutts, "Are You Lost In The World Like Me?"

Dan, I Allegedly, "Global Supply Chains Are Breaking Again - Prices & Shortages Will Surge"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 5/20/26
"Global Supply Chains Are Breaking Again - 
Prices & Shortages Will Surge"
"The global supply chain crisis is getting worse again - and most people have no idea how serious this could become. In this video, I break down the shocking new data showing global shipping delays, transportation costs, manufacturing bottlenecks, and freight congestion reaching the worst levels since 2020. We’re already seeing major disruptions tied to Middle East shipping routes, rerouted cargo vessels, rising oil prices, inventory shortages, and exploding logistics costs. This is affecting groceries, electronics, auto parts, appliances, construction materials, and everyday household products. 

I also explain why companies are panic-stockpiling inventory again and why consumers should start preparing NOW before prices surge even higher. During the last supply chain breakdown, Americans dealt with empty shelves, delayed deliveries, and massive inflation - and the warning signs are flashing again. If you remember the cargo ship crisis off the California coast, this video connects the dots on what’s happening globally and how it will directly impact your wallet, your household, and your ability to buy everyday essentials in the months ahead."
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Marine Traffic App:

"Commercial Oil Inventories Are “Depleting Very Fast” And Global Supply Chain Stress Is Spiking"

by Michael Snyder

"We are watching a slow-motion train wreck play out right in front of our eyes, and nobody can stop it. Every single day that the Strait of Hormuz remains closed, commercial oil inventories will get even lower and national strategic oil reserves will get even lower. Right now the global economy is using more oil than it is producing, and everyone agrees that we are reaching a major crisis point.

Unfortunately, we may arrive at that major crisis point even sooner than many experts were originally projecting. The head of the International Energy Agency is warning that commercial oil inventories are “depleting very fast”…"International Energy Agency Executive Director Fatih Birol warned that the tally of commercial oil inventories is shrinking at an accelerated pace. “I think it is depleting very fast,” he told reporters at the sidelines of a meeting of Group of Seven finance ministers in Paris, echoing comments from last week. It will be “several weeks, but we should be aware of the fact that it is declining rapidly,” he said.

He also highlighted that the spike in fertilizer and diesel prices comes at the start of the travel and planting season. “This could have major implications for the food prices and together with the higher energy prices they might give a big push to inflation numbers,” he said.

Once the cushion that we are running through now is gone, energy prices will go completely nuts and we will see widespread rationing and shortages. In fact, we are already beginning to experience a shortage of motor oil. This is something that I wrote about yesterday, and today CNN issued a major report about this… Wholesale motor oil prices are rising rapidly, and some industry executives are warning of imminent shortages caused by the war with Iran. Damage to key facilities in the Middle East and the shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz have combined to create a perfect storm in this tiny but critical corner of the oil market.

The risk is that some of the most popular kinds of motor oil will be in very short supply, forcing drivers to delay getting their oil changed or rely on suboptimal lubricants. “We’re looking at shortages - I have no doubt in my mind,” Holly Alfano, CEO of the Independent Lubricant Manufacturers Association (ILMA), an industry trade group, told CNN. “It’s a big mess - and it’s not going to be resolved quickly. It could take a year or so before we see any real relief.”

We all use motor oil, and so this is going to hurt. The closure of the Strait of Hormuz has thrown global supply chains for motor oil into a state of complete and utter chaos… The motor oil situation is another reminder of the fragile nature of global supply chains. The problem is that almost half (44%) of the most important base oil used to make motor oil, known as Group III, comes from just three Persian Gulf producers, according to ILMA. Those Middle East supplies have been derailed by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz after the war started in late February.

Not only that, but Pearl GTL, the world’s largest gas-to-liquids (GTL) plant located in Qatar, was attacked and seriously damaged in Iran. That means one of the leading suppliers of Group III base oils has been knocked offline indefinitely.

Can you imagine paying $200 for an oil change? If the Strait of Hormuz remains closed, that is not inconceivable. Of course countless other supply chains have been severely disrupted as well, and global supply chain stress is absolutely soaring as a result…

One week after Maersk CEO Vincent Clerc warned CNBC of a “new wake-up call” for global trade amid the ongoing disruption of the Strait of Hormuz and a deepening energy crisis that could intensify further in June, UBS analysts are out with a new note telling clients they have “reactivated” their Global Supply Chain Stress Index in response to increasingly alarming signals emerging across global logistics networks. “Supply chain stress is rising at its fastest pace since the early pandemic,” UBS analyst Pierre Lafourcade wrote in a note on Sunday. Lafourcade explained that global supply chain stress is emerging quickly, with the index rising by 1.2 standard deviations in March and April, the second-largest two-month jump since July 2020.

Slowly but surely, the consequences of this crisis are starting to filter their way through the economy. For example, more than 5,000 supply chain workers have already been laid off here in the United States…"A sweeping wave of layoffs and facility closures has hit the U.S. supply chain, with more than 5,183 workers affected across at least 20 states. According to a report from FreightWaves by Noi Mahoney, the cuts stem from shutdowns, restructurings, customer contract losses, and operational consolidations in logistics, manufacturing, and transportation. Major employers including FreshRealm, GEODIS, Ryder, and DSV have announced significant workforce reductions as companies seek to cut costs amid softening industrial demand."

Authorities have been trying to keep everyone calm. But investors are starting to get really jittery. In fact, Treasury bond yields are beginning to rise at a very alarming pace…"What the president hasn’t been able to do, however, is address the worrying rise in Treasury bond yields, which remain elevated heading into the Tuesday session. Benchmark 30-year bonds were trading near the highest levels since 2007 at 5.147%, and 10-year notes traded at a 15-month peak of 4.613%.

That could feed further into inflation pressures, which are already building as the economy holds firm, labor markets outperform, and government spending remains elevated from passage of last year’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act."

We desperately need the Strait of Hormuz to be reopened. But if more fighting with Iran erupts, that is not going to happen for an extended period of time. On Tuesday, President Trump warned that there will be “another big hit on Iran” if a peace deal is not reached…  President Donald Trump said he was considering “another big hit on Iran” just a day after he said he delayed possible strikes following progress on a possible deal to end the war.“I hope that we don’t have to do the war. But we may have to give them another big hit,” Trump told reporters on Tuesday. “I’m not sure yet. You’ll know very soon.”

As I have detailed in previous articles, there is no way that the Iranians are going to agree to a deal that is acceptable to Trump. So more bombing is coming, and Fox News is reporting that Israel is rapidly getting prepared for the next wave of airstrikes…Israel is preparing to take part in a potential U.S. strike on Iran, despite President Donald Trump’s statement on May 18 that he had paused a planned attack, according to reports. Citing officials, Israeli broadcaster Channel 12 reported Tuesday that officials also believe Trump’s announcement may have limited his options. The officials suggested that unless Tehran presents a significantly improved proposal - which Israeli leaders consider unlikely - Trump may decide military action is unavoidable, the report says, according to The Times of Israel.

On Monday night, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met with top military officials for five hours. Needless to say, this was not a casual gathering… Last night’s limited security meeting convened by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu lasted nearly five hours – with the IDF chief of staff, air force chief, head of military intelligence, head of the Operations Directorate, and other senior defense officials in attendance – to ensure full preparedness for the possibility of an American strike, the report says.

There is a general consensus among pundits in the western world that the Iranians will eventually back down if they experience enough pressure. They believe that because they don’t understand the Iranians. Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Kazen Gharibabadi has publicly stated that there are only two options for his nation…“Iran, united and resolute, is prepared to confront any military aggression,” Gharibabadi wrote on X. “For us, surrender holds no meaning; we either triumph or become martyrs.”

In their eyes, agreeing to Trump’s terms would be surrender. So that isn’t going to happen. The Iranians have been feverishly preparing for the next round of the war, and they are warning that they are ready to use “new equipment and new methods”…Iran’s army warned on Tuesday that it would “open new fronts” if the war resumed. “If the enemy is foolish enough to fall into the Zionist trap again, and launches new aggression against our beloved Iran, we will open new fronts against it, with new equipment and new methods,” said army spokesman Mohammad Akraminia, according to Iran’s ISNA news agency.

They keep issuing veiled threats like this. I am convinced that what they are hinting at is the use of unconventional weapons. Of course if Iran crosses that line, the U.S and Israel will likely cross that line as well. We are so close to an apocalyptic scenario in the Middle East, and most people in the western world have no idea. Meanwhile, economic conditions are crumbling all around us, and we are going to see some absolutely crazy things happen in the months ahead."

Wars And Rumors Of War: The Middle East"

A Must-view!
Stoic Path Stories, 5/20/26
Jeffrey Sachs, "Iran-Israel Crisis Explodes Overnight"
Overnight developments in the Middle East have shocked global leaders and intensified fears of a wider international crisis. Rapid military escalation, rising geopolitical tensions, and unexpected events across the region are creating uncertainty about what could happen next. In this video, Jeffrey Sachs analyzes the latest developments involving Iran, Israel, the United States, and the growing instability across the Middle East. He explains the strategic consequences of the overnight escalation, the risks of further conflict, and the potential global impact on security, politics, and international relations. Watch till the end for in-depth geopolitical insight, military analysis, and breaking updates on one of the world’s most dangerous and rapidly evolving crises.
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World Affairs In Context, 5/20/26
"Alex Krainer: The End of U.S. Supremacy - 
All-Out War & Economic Demise of The West"
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Col. Larry Wilkerson, 5/20/26
"Israel Is Running Out Of Time, And Trump Knows It"
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Tuesday, May 19, 2026

"King Trump: 'I Don't Think About The Americans Financial Situation. I Don't Think About Anybody"

Strong language alert!
Gerald Celente, 5/19/26
"King Trump: 'I Don't Think About The Americans 
Financial Situation. I Don't Think About Anybody"
Comments here:

"Poseidon: Russia's Nuclear Tsunami Weapon Is Moving Toward U.S. Coast - No Defense Exists"

Full screen recommended.
Col. Douglas Macgregor, 5/19/26
"Poseidon: Russia's Nuclear Tsunami Weapon 
Is Moving Toward U.S. Coast - No Defense Exists"

"Russia has deployed two Poseidon nuclear-armed autonomous underwater vehicles in the North Atlantic. They are moving toward the American East Coast. At 1,000 meters depth. And American antisubmarine warfare cannot reach them. The Poseidon is not a torpedo designed to destroy a ship. It is designed to detonate at 500 meters depth, 300 kilometers offshore, and generate a nuclear tsunami. Wave height at the American coastline: between 100 and 500 meters. Warning time after detonation: 25 minutes. And every American ASW weapon - SOSUS, sonobuoys, MK-48 torpedoes - has a maximum depth of 600 to 800 meters. The Poseidon operates 200 meters below all of them. 

Tonight we break down exactly what the Poseidon is and exactly what a nuclear-generated tsunami does to the East Coast. We go inside the Poseidon's engineering - nuclear propulsion, 1000 meter operating depth, autonomous navigation, two-megaton warhead, detonation geometry. We walk through the tsunami physics - pressure wave propagation, continental shelf amplification, wave height calculation, 25-minute warning time. We explain system by system why American ASW cannot stop it - SOSUS detection limits, sonobuoy depth limits, Virginia-class operating envelope, MK-48 maximum depth. And we assess Putin's strategic calculation - why a weapon whose use ends civilizations is deployed as a coercive signal. This is not mainstream commentary. This is the analysis that takes a nuclear tsunami weapon as seriously as its physics demand. Two Poseidons. 1000 meters depth. 500 meter wave. 25 minutes warning. No defense. Moving now."
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Full screen recommended.
The Last Day Theory, 2/21/26
"Russia's Poseidon Weapon 
Detonates Near New York Harbor"
"The weapon that could end the world is sleeping at the bottom of the ocean. But what if it wakes up? We simulate, second by second, the first 30 minutes after Russia launches its legendary "Poseidon" nuclear torpedo at the US Eastern Seaboard. In this cinematic mini-documentary, we explore how a 100-megaton thermonuclear warhead, combined with radioactive Cobalt-60 salting, transforms into a 100-meter-high toxic tsunami known as "The Green Wall," targeting major cities like Washington D.C. and New York. Based on declassified intelligence, submarine technology, and real physics, this scenario is not just science fiction - it is the ultimate geopolitical nightmare. Can the Poseidon drone be stopped? What happens to the blast zone? And how would the world react to the brink of WWIII?"
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Full screen recommended.
Times Of India, 10/29/25
"Putin's Nuclear Poseidon To Hit US Like Tsunami?
 What Russia's 'Super Weapon' Can Do"
"Russia has conducted its nuclear-capable test of the Poseidon underwater “super weapon,” following the Burevestnik nuclear cruise missile trial. President Vladimir Putin announced the successful test of the Poseidon 2M39, calling it a revolutionary nuclear-powered torpedo capable of evading all existing defences. The Kremlin described it as a “strategic breakthrough,” signalling Moscow’s determination to revive the 21st-century arms race. The Poseidon, powered by a compact nuclear reactor, can reportedly travel thousands of miles underwater at high speeds and to extreme depths, carrying a warhead up to two megatons - 133 times more powerful than the bomb dropped on Hiroshima. Weighing over 90 tons and stretching nearly 60 feet in length, it is designed to trigger tsunami-like destruction along enemy coastlines. The weapon, known to NATO as Kanyon and to Russian engineers as Status-6, could be deployed aboard the Belgorod nuclear submarine. Watch for more details."
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Full screen recommended.
The Poseidon torpedo with a 100 megaton warhead explodes deep underwater, causing a 1,600 foot high tidal wave which would destroy everything on the U.S. East Coast as far inland as West Virginia. England would simply disappear beneath the waves...
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Full screen recommended.
"The True Power of Russia's Tsunami Bomb"
"Mankind has reached a point in its destructive capabilities that it is literally beyond our comprehension. So what is it we really have to fear? The Poseidon (Russian: Посейдон, "Poseidon", GRAU index 2M39, NATO reporting name Kanyon), previously known by Russian codename Status-6 (Russian: Статус-6), is an autonomous, nuclear-powered unmanned underwater vehicle reportedly in production by Rubin Design Bureau, capable of delivering both conventional and nuclear warheads. The Poseidon is one of the six new Russian strategic weapons announced by Russian President Vladimir Putin on 1 March 2018."
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"You're Living Through The Greatest Collapse In American History"

Full screen recommended.
Finance Economist, 5/19/26
"You're Living Through 
The Greatest Collapse In American History"
"You are poorer today than you were last year. The Treasury declared the US insolvent. Banks are hiding $306 billion in losses. 150,000 bankruptcies in 90 days. 113,000 tech workers fired. 30 million behind on credit cards. And the government called it the last of their concerns. This is not a recession. This is a collapse. And nobody is connecting the pieces for you. Until now."
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