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Tuesday, June 30, 2026

“Hannah Arendt on Time, Space, and Where Our Thinking Ego Resides”

“Hannah Arendt on Time, Space,
and Where Our Thinking Ego Resides”
“The everywhere of thought is indeed a region of nowhere.”
by Maria Popova

“In Lewis Carroll’s ‘Through the Looking Glass,’ the White Queen remembers the future instead of the past. This seemingly nonsensical proposition, like so many elements of the beloved book, is a stroke of philosophical genius and prescience on behalf of Lewis Carroll, made half a century before Einstein and Gödel challenged our linear conception of time.

But no thinker has addressed how the disorienting nature of time shapes the human experience with more captivating lucidity than Hannah Arendt (October 14, 1906–December 4, 1975), who in 1973 became the first woman to speak at the prestigious Gifford Lectures. Her talk was eventually adapted into two long essays, published as ‘The Life of the Mind’ (public library) – the same ceaselessly rewarding volume that gave us Arendt on the crucial difference between truth and meaning.

In one of the most stimulating portions of the book, Arendt argues that thinking is our rebellion against the tyranny of time and a hedge against the terror of our finitude. Noting that cognition always removes us from the present and makes absences its raw material, she considers where the thinking ego is located if not in what is present and close at hand:

“Looked at from the perspective of the everyday world of appearances, the everywhere of the thinking ego – summoning into its presence whatever it pleases from any distance in time or space, which thought traverses with a velocity greater than light’s – is a nowhere. And since this nowhere is by no means identical with the twofold nowhere from which we suddenly appear at birth and into which almost as suddenly we disappear in death, it might be conceived only as the Void. And the absolute void can be a limiting boundary concept; though not inconceivable, it is unthinkable. Obviously, if there is absolutely nothing, there can be nothing to think about. That we are in possession of these limiting boundary concepts enclosing our thought within (insurmountable) walls – and the notion of an absolute beginning or an absolute end is among them – does not tell us more than that we are indeed finite beings.”

Echoing Thomas Mann’s assertion that “the perishableness of life… imparts value, dignity, interest to life,” Arendt adds: “Man’s finitude, irrevocably given by virtue of his own short time span set in an infinity of time stretching into both past and future, constitutes the infrastructure, as it were, of all mental activities: it manifests itself as the only reality of which thinking qua thinking is aware, when the thinking ego has withdrawn from the world of appearances and lost the sense of realness inherent in the sensus communis by which we orient ourselves in this world… The everywhere of thought is indeed a region of nowhere.”

T.S. Eliot captured this nowhereness in his exquisite phrase “the still point of the turning world.” But the spatial dimension of thought, Arendt argues, is intersected by a temporal one – thinking invariably forces us to recollect and anticipate, voyaging into the past and the future, thus creating the mental spacetime continuum through which our thought-trains travel. From this arises our sense of the sequential nature of time and its essential ongoingness. Arendt writes:

“The inner time sensation arises when we are not entirely absorbed by the absent non-visibles we are thinking about but begin to direct our attention onto the activity itself. In this situation past and future are equally present precisely because they are equally absent from our sense; thus the no-longer of the past is transformed by virtue of the spatial metaphor into something lying behind us and the not-yet of the future into something that approaches us from ahead.”
[…]
In other words, the time continuum, everlasting change, is broken up into the tenses past, present, future, whereby past and future are antagonistic to each other as the no-longer and the not-yet only because of the presence of man, who himself has an “origin,” his birth, and an end, his death, and therefore stands at any given moment between them; this in-between is called the present. It is the insertion of man with his limited life span that transforms the continuously flowing stream of sheer change – which we can conceive of cyclically as well as in the form of rectilinear motion without ever being able to conceive of an absolute beginning or an absolute end – into time as we know it.”

Once again, it is our finitude that mediates our experience of time: “Seen from the viewpoint of a continuously flowing everlasting stream, the insertion of man, fighting in both directions, produces a rupture which, by being defended in both directions, is extended to a gap, the present seen as the fighter’s battleground… Seen from the viewpoint of man, at each single moment inserted and caught in the middle between his past and his future, both aimed at the one who is creating his present, the battleground is an in-between, an extended Now on which he spends his life. The present, in ordinary life the most futile and slippery of the tenses – when I say “now” and point to it, it is already gone – is no more than the clash of a past, which is no more, with a future, which is approaching and not yet there. Man lives in this in-between, and what he calls the present is a life-long fight against the dead weight of the past, driving him forward with hope, and the fear of a future (whose only certainty is death), driving him backward toward “the quiet of the past” with nostalgia for and remembrance of the only reality he can be sure of.”

This fluid conception of time, Arendt points out, is quite different from its representation in ordinary life, where the calendar tells us that the present is contained in today, the past starts at yesterday, and the future at tomorrow. In a sentiment that calls to mind Patti Smith’s magnificent meditation on time and transformation, Arendt writes: "That we can shape the everlasting stream of sheer change into a time continuum we owe not to time itself but to the continuity of our business and our activities in the world, in which we continue what we started yesterday and hope to finish tomorrow. In other words, the time continuum depends on the continuity of our everyday life, and the business of everyday life, in contrast to the activity of the thinking ego – always independent of the spatial circumstances surrounding it – is always spatially determined and conditioned. It is due to this thoroughgoing spatiality of our ordinary life that we can speak plausibly of time in spatial categories, that the past can appear to us as something lying “behind” us and the future as lying “ahead.”
[…]
The gap between past and future opens only in reflection, whose subject matter is what is absent – either what has already disappeared or what has not yet appeared. Reflection draws these absent “regions” into the mind’s presence; from that perspective the activity of thinking can be understood as a fight against time itself.”

This elusive gap, Arendt argues, is where the thinking ego resides – and it is only by mentally inserting ourselves between the past and the future that they come to exist at all: Without [the thinker], there would be no difference between past and future, but only everlasting change. Or else these forces would clash head on and annihilate each other. But thanks to the insertion of a fighting presence, they meet at an angle, and the correct image would then have to be what the physicists call a parallelogram of forces.

These two forces, which have an indefinite origin and a definite end point in the present, converge into a third – a diagonal pull that, contrary to the past and the present, has a definite origin in the present and emanates out toward infinity. That diagonal force, Arendt observes, is the perfect metaphor for the activity of thought. She writes:

“This diagonal, though pointing to some infinity, is limited, enclosed, as it were, by the forces of past and future, and thus protected against the void; it remains bound to and is rooted in the present – an entirely human present though it is fully actualized only in the thinking process and lasts no longer than this process lasts. It is the quiet of the Now in the time-pressed, time-tossed existence of man; it is somehow, to change the metaphor, the quiet in the center of a storm which, though totally unlike the storm, still belongs to it. In this gap between past and future, we find our place in time when we think, that is, when we are sufficiently removed from past and future to be relied on to find out their meaning, to assume the position of “umpire,” of arbiter and judge over the manifold, never-ending affairs of human existence in the world, never arriving at a final solution to their riddles but ready with ever-new answers to the question of what it may be all about.”

“The Life of the Mind” is one of the most stimulating packets of thought ever published. Complement this particular portion with Virginia Woolf on the elasticity of time, Dan Falk on how our capacity for mental time travel made us human, and T.S. Eliot’s poetic ode to the nature of time.“

The Daily "Near You?"

Loveland, Colorado,USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"There Are Simply No Answers..."

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

"He Delivered Letters Every Day… Until One Changed"

Full screen recommended.
"He Delivered Letters Every Day…
 Until One Changed"

Native Elder, "How to Walk Away From Everything That Stole Your Peace"

Full screen recommended.
Native Elder,
"How to Walk Away From 
Everything That Stole Your Peace"

"How Did I Get So Old So Fast"

Full screen recommended.
Delta King's Blues,
"How Did I Get So Old So Fast"
"One minute you’re running wild… next minute you’re wondering where the years went. “How Did I Get So Old So Fast” is a reflective Delta King’s Blues tune about time slipping by, memories stacking up, and the quiet shock of realizing life moved quicker than expected. A slow, nostalgic acoustic guitar carries the melody like footsteps down an old road you haven’t walked in years. The harmonica sighs long and thoughtful, echoing laughter from younger days and the lessons time left behind. The groove drifts easy and steady, built for late nights, old photographs, and stories that start with “I remember when…” This is blues about time catching up with you. For folks who blinked… and suddenly the mirror tells a different story. Life didn’t slow down - we just started noticing the miles."

"How It Really Is"

The greatest little whorehouse, well, anywhere...
o
"Congress consists of one-third, more or less, scoundrels; 
two-thirds, more or less, idiots; and three-thirds, more or less, poltroons."
– H.L. Mencken
o
"Suppose you were an idiot. And suppose you were a member of Congress.
But I repeat myself."

"All Congresses and Parliaments have a kindly feeling for idiots,
and a compassion for them, on account of personal experience and heredity."

"...the smallest minds and the selfishest souls and the cowardliest hearts that God makes."

"The lightning there is peculiar; it is so convincing, that when it strikes a
thing it doesn't leave enough of that thing behind for you to tell whether -
Well, you'd think it was something valuable, and a Congressman had been there."

"It could probably be shown by facts and figures that there is no distinctly
native American criminal class except Congress."

"Fleas can be taught nearly anything that a Congressman can."

- Mark Twain

"People Are Starting to Realize the America We Grew Up With Is Gone"

Full screen recommended.
"People Are Starting to Realize the America
 We Grew Up With Is Gone"
"For millions of Americans, something feels deeply off. The economy looks stable on paper, but everyday life tells a different story. Housing costs keep rising, groceries feel more expensive every week, debt is becoming harder to escape, and even people with steady jobs are struggling to stay afloat. Many are beginning to question whether the old promise of the American Dream still works the way it once did. In this video, we break down what is really happening behind the growing cost of living crisis in America. From rising mortgage payments and insurance costs to grocery inflation, wage stagnation, and household debt, this analysis explores why so many people feel like they are working harder while falling further behind. More importantly, we examine the deeper shift happening beneath the surface: the growing gap between wages and assets, and why financial stability feels increasingly difficult to achieve. Over the last five years, what changed the most where you live: housing costs, grocery prices, or wages? Share your experience in the comments."
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"Something Is Seriously Wrong at Walmart... And Customers Are Fed Up"

Full screen recommended.
Across The States, 6/30/26
"Something Is Seriously Wrong at Walmart... 
And Customers Are Fed Up"
"Why is Walmart changing so much in 2026? Locked shelves, rising prices, disappearing brands, AI-powered stores, self-checkout, and digital price tags are transforming the shopping experience. But are these changes making Walmart better - or simply more profitable? In this video, we break down what's really happening inside the world's largest retailer. Here's the thing... many shoppers have noticed that something feels different, even if they can't explain it. 

From private-label expansion to advanced AI inventory systems, Walmart is quietly reshaping how millions of people shop every week. What most people don't realize is that these changes aren't random. They're part of a larger retail strategy focused on automation, operational efficiency, and attracting a broader customer base. We also explore how inflation, retail theft, labor shifts, and technology are influencing Walmart's future. The reality is... Walmart remains one of the strongest retailers in the world, but its evolution raises important questions about customer experience, pricing, convenience, and trust. Watch till the end and share your opinion - has Walmart improved, or has it lost what made it special?"
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Dan, I Allegedly, "You Will Work Until You Die"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 6/30/26
"You Will Work Until You Die"
"Retirement is becoming more difficult for millions of Americans. A recent survey found that 42% of adults over 60 believe they will never be able to retire, a dramatic increase from just a few years ago. In this video, I break down why inflation, rising housing costs, Social Security concerns, disappearing pensions, healthcare expenses, and the cost of living are forcing more people to work far longer than they ever expected. We also discuss why retirement has become a luxury instead of something many Americans can count on. We also cover the latest business news and economic headlines, including restaurant closures, changes in the job market, AI in the workplace, housing affordability, retirement planning, and consumer finance. If you're concerned about your financial future, retirement savings, Social Security, or where the economy is headed, this is a conversation you won't want to miss. Be sure to leave a comment and let us know: Do you think you'll ever be able to retire?"
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Bill Bonner, "Mission Creeps"

"Mission Creeps"
by Bill Bonner

"We want a revolution,
And we want it now."
- The persecution and assassination of Jean-Paul Marat as performed by 
the inmates of the asylum at Charenton and directed by the Marquis de Sade.

Youghal, Ireland - "Yesterday we peeked ahead at what wickedness this way comes. Today we lift our heads to take in a broader view. The notion is plain enough. The one feat Donald Trump genuinely brought off - the only one, some would grumble - was to enlarge, vastly and lastingly, the sum of mischief a President may get away with. And now the next regime, be it Republican or Democrat, will lay its hands upon that swollen new power.

We saw yesterday how the Democrats, like Madame Defarge knitting the names of the doomed into her endless wool, are already drawing up their lists: of those to be prosecuted, of those to be cashiered, of bureaus to be raised from the dead or buried, of budgets and taxes to be heaped higher, and of free this and free that.

It is not beyond all possibility that such authority might fall to an American Javier Milei, the Argentine, who is actually balancing his books and paring down the bulk of the state. But one would be a fool to wager on it. Nations cast off their parasitic elites only when they have no choice  - that is, when they are whipped in war or have run out of money. Far likelier, the Democrats, the Republicans, the Deep Staters, and the whole grinning regiment of opportunists and world improvers will go on making a bad business worse. How so? And why?

Here is our hypothesis. As the federal machine spends more, squanders more, hatches more agencies, and scribbles more rules, the economy bends under the load. The United States, saddled with nearly $40 trillion of public debt, can scarcely drag itself forward. At present rates it shells out close to $1.6 trillion a year in interest alone; ten years hence the tribute will likely run to $3 trillion a year. The military budget already blubbers toward a trillion and a half. Reckon the guns and the butter together and you have better than $3 trillion - near a tenth of the whole GDP - torn each year out of the real, productive economy.

That drag is the spawn of political self-aggrandizement - mission creep - wedded to a counterfeit-money system that makes the whole swindle possible. It is the foundational fraud of modern government: the solemn pretense that the citizen grows better off as the feds boss him around and spend more of his money.

We have shown before that it is actually a sort of Ponzi scheme - or a Cantillon Effect - wherein the first generations empty their glasses from debt-financed partying and the generations following are handed the bill. We are now well into the “generations following.” And with the sins of the fathers piled upon their backs, it grows ever harder for ordinary people to wring what they want out of the government, or out of the economy itself.

Discontent swells. And as it swells, the people go casting about for more “radical” champions. The old mumbly-fumbly will no longer work. Right and left alike, they bawl for action. They behold a china shop; they clamor for a bull.

That is the meaning of the late elections in New York City, where all three congressional candidates blessed by Mayor Mamdani came home winners, dealing the establishment Democrats a thumping. More mainstream aspirants, such as young Jack Schlossberg, grandson of the martyred Kennedy clan, were sent home.

“New Yorkers are hungry for a new kind of politics,” quoth Mamdani. And so, it appears, are the Californians - and the voters of Louisiana, of Maryland, of Maine. From the corn belt to the shrimp boats, the moderate, the temperate, the middle-of-the-roader is being shouldered off the highway into the ditch.

The people crave change. They feel the malaise in their bones but cannot name its cause. They want a revolution. So, they turn to the Big Man and the radical, mistaking brassy manners and bold fronts for genuine understanding and a settled plan.

The Democratic slate in New York - Mamdani at its head - has neither the faintest grasp of what ails the city nor any serious elixir to cure it. In place of both, it peddles nostrums tried a hundred times before and failed every time: a four-year freeze on the rents of a million stabilized flats; free childcare from the age of six weeks; buses without fare; a $30/hour minimum wage by 2030; municipal grocery stores hawking produce at wholesale; and a brand-new Department of Community Safety at a tidy $1.1 billion a year. To foot this banquet, Mamdani would lay a fresh two percent tax upon every New Yorker earning above a million, and hoist the city’s corporate levy besides.

Whether the sheep will sit meekly still for the shearing remains to be seen. Already, we read, Goldman Sachs is shifting yet more of its New York flock to Dallas. In the cities of America, you can still vote with your feet. It will not be half so easy when the “new kind of politics” has got its grip upon the whole country."

Monday, June 29, 2026

"San Andreas: The Big One That Could Destroy California"

A Terrifying Must-view!
Full screen recommended.
"San Andreas: 
The Big One That Could Destroy California"

"California sits on a clock that has been running for three hundred and forty-six years. The southern section of the San Andreas Fault last ruptured in 1680. Since that moment, two tectonic plates have been pressing against each other at nearly two inches per year - accumulating twenty feet of slip deficit that has nowhere to go. When that energy releases, it will release in a single motion. This is the story of the most studied locked fault on the planet. Eight hundred miles of fractured rock running from the Salton Sea to Cape Mendocino. Forty million people living above it. Three sections, three rupture cycles, three different stages of accumulated strain. And one number that science cannot produce - the year. 

In January 1857, the central section opened for two hundred and twenty miles in ninety seconds. In April 1906, the northern section burned San Francisco for three days. In 1680, the southern section spoke for the last time. Three dates. Three sets of accumulated slip. Three eventual ruptures, in some order, separated by some interval. The arrivals are not predictable. The arrivals are guaranteed. This documentary follows the work of the scientists who counted the past in mud. Kerry Sieh, spending thirteen years in trenches at Pallett Creek, reading earthquakes from peat layers stretching back fifteen hundred years. Lucy Jones, leading three hundred specialists at the United States Geological Survey to model what happens in the first month of a magnitude 7.8 rupture - eighteen hundred dead, sixteen hundred fires burning simultaneously, six months without restored water service. 

Hiroo Kanamori at the California Institute of Technology, building the magnitude 8.2 model that no public agency wants to discuss. Thomas Jordan at the Southern California Earthquake Center, calculating the slip deficit that has been building since before California had a name. Andrew Lawson, walking the entire trace of the fault on foot in 1895, predicting that the cycle would repeat. It has. Los Angeles weighs approximately four billion tons. It sits on the Pacific Plate. The plate is moving northwest at the speed of a human fingernail growing. The friction holding it in place has held for three hundred and forty-six years on the southern section. The plates do not consult retrofit inventories. They do not wait for emergency preparedness drills. They are governed by the conservation of momentum, the friction coefficient of granitic rock against itself, and the temperature of the lower crust. Every one of those parameters has been measured. None of them favors delay."
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"The Earthquakes Just Won’t Stop: The New Madrid Fault And The Cascadia Subduction Zone Both Get Shaken As The Warnings Continue"

"The Earthquakes Just Won’t Stop: The New Madrid Fault And
 The Cascadia Subduction Zone Both Get Shaken As The Warnings Continue"
by Michael Snyder

"How much shaking is it going to take before most of the population starts paying attention? The ground underneath our feet just keeps shaking. Nobody can deny this. As you will see below, there has been a long list of large earthquakes that have hit our planet over the past week, and this is something that I have been writing about a lot in recent days. What we are experiencing is not normal, and many believe that all of this shaking is just a preview of what is to come.

On Monday morning, a magnitude 5.5 earthquake suddenly struck approximately 140 miles off the coast of Oregon…"The Pacific’s notorious ‘Ring of Fire’ has delivered another jolt amid a recent burst of seismic activity around the globe’s most earthquake-prone region. The US Geological Survey detected a magnitude 5.5 earthquake roughly 140 miles west of the Oregon coast at around 7:35am ET Monday. The earthquake struck deep beneath the Pacific Ocean and there were no immediate reports of damage or injuries. No tsunami warning was issued, although residents in Salem and Rockaway Beach reported feeling the shaking."

The reason why this was such a noteworthy quake is because it occurred along the Cascadia Subduction Zone… The quake occurred along a tectonically active stretch of the Pacific coastline, part of the broader Cascadia Subduction Zone known for producing both frequent moderate events and the potential for far larger ones.

This is one of the most dangerous fault zones in the entire world. It sits on the Pacific Ring of Fire, and it has the potential to cause seismic events of cataclysmic proportions. Scientists assure us that it is just a matter of time before a gigantic earthquake occurs along the Cascadia Subduction Zone, and I have repeatedly warned about what this will mean for those living near the coasts of Oregon and Washington once this happens…

"Someday, an absolutely gigantic earthquake along the Cascadia Subduction Zone will send a colossal wall of water toward the west coast of the United States. We are talking about a disaster that would be greater than anything we have ever experienced in the entire history of our country so far, and scientists are openly warning us that it is just a matter of time before such a disaster happens. It is being projected that the wall of water could be up to 100 feet tall, and it will cause extreme devastation. Tall buildings will be instantly flattened, vehicles will be picked up and tossed around like toys, and countless numbers of people will instantly go to their watery graves. If you are directly in the path of such a tsunami, there will be no escape."

Do you remember the huge tsunami that hit Japan in 2011? The tsunami that will eventually hit the west coast will absolutely dwarf that.

This latest earthquake off the coast of Oregon comes just days after a magnitude 5.6 earthquake hit Northern California and a pair of very large earthquakes caused catastrophic damage in Venezuela… This comes after a 5.6 magnitude earthquake rattled Northern California and major back-to-back earthquakes struck Venezuela last Wednesday. Days later, heightened seismic activity across the Pacific Ring of Fire brought earthquakes to Japan, the Philippines, and Nicaragua on Friday. It is almost as if something has just suddenly snapped.

Over the past 7 days, we have witnessed a very long list of large earthquakes all over the world
That is a stunning list. And the shaking just won’t stop. In fact, Venezuela just got hit by some more very big aftershocks…"Strong aftershocks have struck Venezuela’s capital as rescuers continue to search for tens of thousands of civilians who are still missing in the aftermath of two violent earthquakes. The aftershock was felt shortly after 7.00am (11.00am GMT) in Caracas and La Guaira on Monday, as the search continues for survivors of last Wednesday’s quakes that have already claimed at least 1,450 lives."

It would be difficult to overstate the scale of the tragedy that we are witnessing in Venezuela. At this stage, nearly 70,000 people have been reported missing…"The death toll from Venezuela’s twin earthquakes has risen to 1,430, with families reporting at least 68,900 people missing. The toll continued to climb even after the 72-hour window for rescuing survivors alive closed Saturday, while anger over the government’s response intensified in some of the hardest-hit areas."

I have a feeling that the vast majority of those that have been reported missing were killed by the earthquakes. Many of them will never be found. As our planet continues to become even more unstable, there will be even larger earthquakes.

One of the biggest danger zones is right in the middle of the United States, and very early on Monday a magnitude 3.5 earthquake rattled southern Illinois…"According to the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), a magnitude 3.5 earthquake registered at 1:05 a.m. in northwest Edwards County, just south of the Richland County line. This is close to the Illinois-Indiana border. USGS reports the epicenter was 3.7 miles northeast of West Salem and measured 11.8 miles deep."

I asked Google if West Salem is close to the New Madrid Fault Zone, and this is what I was told…"Yes, West Salem, Illinois, is in a region considered at risk from the New Madrid Seismic Zone and the nearby Wabash Valley Seismic Zone."

I believe that this was another warning. This earthquake caused so much shaking that it was actually felt in St. Louis and Louisville…So far, the USGS says hundreds of people have reported feeling shaking across a wide stretch as far west as St. Louis, Missouri, as north as Effingham, Illinois, as south as Evansville, Indiana and as east as Louisville, Kentucky.

The largest earthquakes in the history of the continental United States occurred along the New Madrid Fault Zone. Now the New Madrid Fault Zone is waking up again. One of these days, a colossal earthquake will literally rip the country in half from north to south. The scar that will be created in the middle of the nation will be so deep that the Great Lakes will actually flow into the Gulf of Mexico. Since all of the existing bridges will be destroyed, you will actually need to take a boat ride or a flight if you want to travel from the eastern half of the country to the western half of the country.

But most of the population is not alarmed by the shaking that we are currently witnessing at all. They have been assured that all of this shaking is just temporary and that things will soon return to normal. Of course the truth is that there will be no return to normal. Chaos is erupting all over the planet, and I believe that the second half of this year will be even more chaotic than the first half."

"The American Way Of Life Just Died"

Full screen recommended.
Finance Economist, 6/29/26
"The American Way Of Life Just Died"
"A Whopper cost $1.54 in 1986. It costs $7.89 today. The meal went up 424%. The minimum wage went up 116%. That receipt is the death certificate. Researchers built an index measuring the minimum cost of a dignified life in America. The bottom 60% can’t afford it. The index DOUBLED since 2001. Wages went up 11%. A couple with one child needs $100,000/year for the MINIMUM. The median household earns $80,000. You need $121,400 to buy a home. The average earner makes $84,000. Rent is up 54% since 2017. Housing up 60% since 2019. 40% have been displaced. Half of Gen Z moved because staying was impossible. Retirement? Social Security runs out in 2033. The average 401k lasts 8 years. You’ll live 25 more. The car costs $1,100/month to reach a job that doesn’t pay enough to cover the drive. A tomato costs 40% more than last year. And the three things that funded the entire way of life cheap energy, cheap credit, and imperial privilege are all ending at the same time. The American way of life is dead. What replaces it has no name. And the namelessness is the terror."
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Musical Interlude: Paul Simon, "Slip Slidin' Away"

Paul Simon, "Slip Slidin' Away"

"A Look to the Heavens"

“NGC 253 is not only one of the brightest spiral galaxies visible, it is also one of the dustiest. Discovered in 1783 by Caroline Herschel in the constellation of Sculptor, NGC 253 lies only about ten million light-years distant.
NGC 253 is the largest member of the Sculptor Group of Galaxies, the nearest group to our own Local Group of Galaxies. The dense dark dust accompanies a high star formation rate, giving NGC 253 the designation of starburst galaxy. Visible in the above photograph is the active central nucleus, also known to be a bright source of X-rays and gamma rays.”

"The Life You Have Left..."

“The life you have left is a gift. Cherish it.
Enjoy it now, to the fullest. Do what matters, now.”
~ Leo Babauta

“You Want Rights? Well, Sunshine… Here’s What You’re Missing”

“You Want Rights? Well, Sunshine… 
Here’s What You’re Missing”
So Many Rights, So Little Understanding
by Chris

“Sometimes when I sit down to share my thoughts with you I know I’m going to piss off a bunch of people. Today is one of those days. So if you’re bitterly hostile, suffer from low self esteem, have nihilistic tendencies, and offer to the world a bag full of self contempt and not much else, then you need to read on. You’ll hate me for it but really… this is for you!

You’ve been fighting for all sorts of “rights” and sadly society is actually taking you seriously rather than treating you as they should, which is to say one with a mental illness. Instead, here we find ourselves in an environment where criminals are and will be made out of perfectly decent, honorable, good people.

For example, if you don’t get “affirmative consent” before getting jiggity with a partner, it’s considered rape on some university campuses. And the same goes if your partner has been drinking. By this criteria most every male in the world is a rapist, myself included. When you’re “in the moment”, nobody’s stopping, saying, “Hey, hang on a moment, sweetheart. Please, can you provide me with your affirmative consent to ravage you?” What the hell?  And if you and your partner had a glass of wine beforehand, you’re definitely a rapist.

Islamophobia is another. Listen, I could care less about your religious affiliation or lack thereof. If you’re not fearful of an ideological belief which champions ending your life if you’re not going to follow the doctrine, then you’re an idiot, and so it’s only idiots that campaign against common sense rational prudence.

As I mentioned talking about the virtues of discriminationDo you discriminate when you steer clear of a group of young men with an aggressive swagger walking at night? I sure hope so. This is not prejudice it’s bloody prudence. In a mad bid to prove “acceptance” and “tolerance” the West have gone entirely off the deep end ignoring and condoning comments and actions completely antithetical and incompatible with modern Western Civilization.

While we’re on the topic of insane political correctness we can’t leave out gender equality (a ludicrous term because, by our very nature, women and men are not equal). Our very unequal-ness is what allows us to interact on a mutual and agreeable basis. And yes, the liberation of and freedom of women is easily one of the most positive forces that any country could possibly move forward on. That doesn’t mean we’re equal. I sure as hell can’t give birth, and I’m nowhere near as organized as my wife, and studies have shown that women are unequivocally more organized while men for example are more industrious. It’s how we’re wired. Trying to make us the same is pathologically stupid.

The Washington Post ran an article on how you and I will become criminals by inadvertently calling a spade a spade… a woman and woman… and a man a man. You can be fined for not calling people “ze” or “hir,” if that’s the pronoun they demand that you use. In fact, apparently there are 56 pronouns now to be used including such beauties as “gender-fluid” and “two-spirit”. You can’t make this sh*t up!
Perhaps we should just keep safe and use “oy” for everyone. That ought to sort the problem out. As for myself, I think I’m going with “Milord”.

Look, I could care less if you’re a bloke who lopped your diddle off and now wants to be called Sally, but this shouldn’t govern society, for goodness sake. Freedom of expression is one thing but this incipient, creeping cancer (because that’s what it is) attempts to dictate what are trivialities and it’s dangerous. Very dangerous! It’s an ideology and ideologies are extremely dangerous.

The Flip Side to Rights… are responsibilities. The “right” to free healthcare entails someone to provide that healthcare. That’s a responsibility and it takes effort, capital, skill, intellect, and hard work.

The same is true of all rights, and I want to emphasize this with flushed cheeks, waving hands, and spittle. All rights are someone else’s responsibility. It can’t be any other way. Take away the responsibility and your “rights” are just words because they’re as useless as Mike Tyson in a spelling bee. I mean go into, say, Zimbabwe and legislate universal free healthcare. Well, since there’s nobody responsible that’ll actually make that happen, it’s a waste of time.

And here’s the problem that bleeding-heart liberals fail to understand. The West is educating and grooming generations of useless, bedwetting, irresponsible intellectually vapid children (because, despite their age, that’s what they are). And lacking from this tsunami of the cotton-wool-clad crowd is ANY responsibility. Try foist it on them and they screech “triggered” and retreat to a “safe space”.

So pray tell, what happens when a real crisis hits? When the sovereign debt bubble bursts and the socialist systems that have been built on this funding mechanism (sovereign debt markets) and which are completely expected to simply provide for these “children” rapidly run out of funding?

Try explaining to these “children” that a mere 1% rise in bond yields could trigger a bond crisis the likes of which we’ve never seen before in our lives. And try further explaining what this means to all their “rights…” and you may as well be talking to your dog because intellectual rigor is not something they’ve ever been exposed to. Instead, they’ve spent their lives ensuring they’re shielded from it. The inescapable logic that being “two-spirit” could (and will) be rapidly superseded by the need to fill one’s belly is indeed entirely missed.

What happens next? I’ll tell you what happens next. We’ve the most fertile grounds you could imagine for tyranny because you know what? There ain’t gonna be nobody strong enough to stop it happening. What’s a sane person to do? Probably best to simply position accordingly.”
“Dictatorship naturally arises out of democracy, and the most 
aggravated form of tyranny and slavery out of the most extreme liberty.” 
- Plato

"Planet Mind Control"

Full screen recommended.
Jason Christoff, "Planet Mind Control"
"I just was on a zoom call with Jason Christoff, the producer of this documentary. His presentation was outstanding and convincing. I don’t think any of this will be a surprise to TBPers. This method was laid out clearly by Edward Bernays in 1928, but the technology available to the overlords today makes mind control so much easier. Covid was the ultimate use of mind control to make people do as they were told." - Jim Quinn

The Daily "Near You?"

Minot, North Dakota, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

The Poet: Jane Hirshfield, "The Task"

“The Task”

"It is a simple garment, this slipped-on world.
We wake into it daily - open eyes, braid hair -
a robe unfurled
in rose-silk flowering, then laid bare.
And yes, it is a simple enough task
we've taken on,
though also vast:
from dusk to dawn,
from dawn to dusk, to praise, and not
be blinded by the praising.
To lie like a cat in hot
sun, fur fully blazing,
and dream the mouse;
and to keep too the mouse's patient, waking watch
within the deep rooms of the house,
where the leaf-flocked
sunlight never reaches, but the earth still blooms.”

- Jane Hirshfield

"Perhaps..."

“How should we be able to forget those ancient myths that are at the beginning of all peoples, the myths about dragons that at the last moment turn into princesses; perhaps all the dragons of our lives are princesses who are only waiting to see us once beautiful and brave. Perhaps everything terrible is in its deepest being something helpless that wants help from us. So you must not be frightened if a sadness rises up before you larger than any you have ever seen; if a restiveness, like light and cloud shadows, passes over your hands and over all you do. You must think that something is happening with you, that life has not forgotten you, that it holds you in its hand; it will not let you fall.”
- Rainer Maria Rilke

"A Friendship Measured in Sunsets"

Full screen recommended.
John AI Art,
"A Friendship Measured in Sunsets"

Native Elder, "How to Age Like a Warrior Instead of a Victim"

Full screen recommended.
Native Elder,
"How to Age Like a Warrior Instead of a Victim"

"A Good Song Still Fixes a Bad Day"

Full screen recommended.
"A Good Song Still Fixes a Bad Day"
"Some days knock you down… but a good song can still lift you back up. “A Good Song Still Fixes a Bad Day” is a heartfelt Delta King’s Blues tune about the healing power of music - when life gets heavy and the blues become the medicine. A warm, easy-flowing acoustic guitar sets the groove like an old friend pulling up a chair. The harmonica sings soft and soulful, carrying away the weight of a long, tired day. The rhythm stays slow and comforting, built for late nights, quiet rooms, and the moment when the music finally makes things feel alright again. This is blues about the cure inside the sound. For anyone who knows that sometimes one song is all it takes to turn the night around. Life gets rough… but the right song still knows how to mend it."

"How It Really Is"

 
Oh yeah, beyond words, any I know anyway...
o
“When the world goes mad, one must accept madness as sanity;
since sanity is, in the last analysis, nothing but the
madness on which the whole world happens to agree.”
- George Bernard Shaw
o
Full screen recommended.
Gary Jules, "Mad  World"

"Something Is Deeply Broken In The American Economy... And It's Getting Worse"

Full screen recommended.
Epic Economist, 6/29/26
"Something Is Deeply Broken In 
The American Economy... And It's Getting Worse"
"You're working harder than your parents ever did, making more money than you've ever made and somehow you're more broke than you've ever been. If that sounds familiar, you're not imagining it. And you're not alone. This is a compilation of everyday Americans saying out loud what millions are quietly living through. The college degree that was supposed to guarantee a good life, and the worker holding it who still can't afford groceries. The 29-year-old with a full-time job who had to move back in with his parents. The person 16 months into a job search with nothing but automated rejection emails. The renter paying application fee after application fee on apartments that were never going to approve them. It's the small things too, the fast food sandwich that's half the size and double the price, the $650 game console a working adult can barely justify, the coffee shop charging "market price" for a drink, the home repair where every single quote comes back over a thousand dollars. 

And it's the big things: an entire middle class disappearing, teen jobs taken by desperate adults, and a tech giant admitting in writing that AI is why thousands of people just lost their careers. None of these people are exaggerating. They're describing the same economy from a dozen different angles, wages that don't move, prices that never stop, and a promise that quietly stopped being true. If you've felt it too, you're not crazy, and you're not alone. Millions are starting to say the same thing."
Comments here:

"The Collapse of Complex Societies + Food Dump USA"

Video here:
Bright Videos News, June 29, 2026
"The Collapse of Complex Societies + Food Dump USA"

"America's Cost of Living Is Getting Completely Out of Control"

Full screen recommended.
The Unfolded States, 6/29/26
"America's Cost of Living Is
 Getting Completely Out of Control"
"Why does life in America feel so much harder even when the economy looks strong on paper? In this video, we break down why millions of Americans, including many middle-class households and even six-figure earners, are feeling financially squeezed like never before. Rising housing costs, exploding insurance premiums, expensive healthcare, growing household debt, and shrinking purchasing power are creating a cost of living crisis that is becoming impossible to ignore. This analysis goes beyond headlines and viral anecdotes to explain the deeper mechanisms behind America’s affordability problem. We examine why salaries no longer provide the same financial security, why so many families are living paycheck to paycheck, and why the margin for error has become dangerously small. The bigger issue may not be inflation alone, but the fact that essential expenses now consume more of each paycheck, leaving less room for stability, savings, and long-term planning. If you live in the U.S., what expense has changed your life the most in the last few years: housing, groceries, healthcare, insurance, or debt? Share your experience in the comments."
Comments here:

Dan, I Allegedly, "They're All Warning Us Now!"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 6/29/26
"They're All Warning Us Now!"
"Three of the world's most influential business leaders - Elon Musk, Tim Cook, and Mark Cuban - are sounding alarms about different parts of the economy, but their warnings point toward the same larger problem. From rising AI infrastructure costs and memory chip shortages to inflation, higher consumer prices, and the future of American jobs, these concerns could affect everything from the next iPhone to the cost of doing business and everyday living. In today's video, I break down what these warnings really mean, why technology costs could continue climbing, how AI is changing the workforce, and what it means for your finances, investments, and family budget. We'll also discuss inflation, consumer spending, business risks, and why protecting yourself financially has never been more important. As always, I appreciate your support of i Allegedly. Please share your thoughts in the comments and let me know how these changes are affecting you and your community."
Comments here:

John Wilder, "Why We Can’t Do War Anymore"

"Why We Can’t Do War Anymore"
by John Wilder

“Get there first with the most men,” is a quote that is attributed to Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forrest. This was translated by the New York Times® in 1917 as “Git thar fustest with the most mostest” because, well, because of course they did. This reached its zenith during World War II. Defeating Germany and Japan wasn’t so much of a military operation but was rather an economic operation. It was the economy that could produce the mostest fustest.

One example is the aircraft carrier. The United States entered World War II with eight aircraft carriers, of which seven were “fleet carriers” and the other one was a small “escort” carrier. It ended with 28 fleet carriers, 9 light carriers, and over 70 escort carriers, making (best guess) 101 operational carriers on in August, 1945 when Japan surrendered after we dropped two portable stars on their island. This worked. We could afford to build the planes, atomic bombs, and the ships while still having enough money left over to afford to get a couple of nice ribeyes. We didn’t just outproduce the Axis, we outproduced them so thoroughly that by the end of the war we had more aircraft carriers than most countries have paved roads.

World War II and the following Cold War were economic wars. How much capital could the United States and the Soviet Union throw into weapons programs to get there fustest with the mostest? Well, trillions. Ultimately, the sheer cost of Soviet weapons programs combined with their crappy commie economy caused the whole thing to fall over.

The United States had perfected Modern Warfare, which was really just having the economy produce millions of tons of weapons that we hoped never to use, and occasionally smashing a country with a few missiles or invading Iraq and Afghanistan a couple of times. Our technology was amazing. Our previous capital investments allowed us to win any sort of World War II battle we might run into. You know, if Rommel and the Bockauge Korps appears from a parallel universe and decides to invade Ohio. Yay! I knew we could do it!

But things change, and technology changes. The biggest change to the world has been the cheap drone. It’s not cheap when the military does it, since the military procurement process makes things stupidly expensive. On Amazon®, there is a drone available that will carry a 30-kilogram payload. An M107 155mm projectile carries about 7kg of explosive. I have no idea what Comp B costs, but the drone is $15,000 retail, so a nation can buy those in bulk and air drop the equivalent of an M107 shell with ease and with precision for less than $20,000 a trip, and, say, less than $2,000 if you reuse the drone.

An M777 155mm howitzer costs over $4 million. To be fair, the Pentagon could turn that $15,000 drone into a $2million program if allowed to, complete with a 47 page PowerPoint© about diversity, equity, and inclusion plus the requirement that it have a non-gendered toilet. This is our military’s true superpower.

The capital model of build more stuff that gets there quickly that the Soviets Russians relied on when they invaded Ukraine broke down because it’s now changed. A $4million tank can be taken out easily by the cheap drone. In fact, I’d imagine you could get more than 300 of the drones for the price of one tank, and if you re-use them just twice, that’s 600 to 1200 shots perfectly on target, which isn’t warfare, it’s Prime Day© for explosions. Sure, they’ve had to move to fiber-optics because of jamming.

The bigger problem has been the cheap drone plane, which are currently chewing up Russian refineries. Both the Russians and the Ukrainians are using them to attack each other. They’re cost is somewhere between $10,000 to $40,000 per unit, as a guess. These are cheaply made fixed wing planes that carry 100-pound warheads. Who needs a bomber? Who needs a pilot? Now, for $40,000, one of these planes can easily cause $10,000,000 damage to an oil refinery.

Which brings us to the Strait of Hormuz. The initial attacks on the vessels shipping sweet, sweet oil out to the world was done using $200,000-ish anti-ship missiles. That’s expensive, so recently they’ve swapped out and are using Shahed® fixed-wing drones that the Russian fixed-wing drones are based on. Again, cost is probably about $10,000 to $40,000 per unit. The cost of the drones is probably about $750,000 to $5,000,000. Total.

And what did that cost the economies of the world? $1.5-$3 trillion. That’s a 300,000 to 1 return at the low end. The previous models required men to be moved, and the more of them the better, with more guns and banks and planes and bombs equaling victory. Victory was about who had the most capital, and who could bring the most people to the front and build the most bombers and have enough pilots to keep flying them.

In the new models, a base within missile or drone range isn’t an asset, it’s a target. The 11 supercarriers are now . . . targets. They are very large, very expensive targets that need to be kept so far from the actual fighting that they’re mostly useful for looking impressive in press releases and photo ops. At $13 billion a ship with 6,000 personnel on board, we’ve somehow created a weapon so valuable we can’t afford to use it. It’s less of a warship than a very large, very slow hostage with its own zip code.

The final result of the “war is a capital competition” has produced a hostage with a flight deck that needs to stay a continent away from the fight and replaced thousands of men and billions of dollars with a guy, a laptop, and decent wifi.

War in an interconnected world has ceased to look anything like war from 1943. Like in the book "Dune", the idea to war now is to deprive your enemy of something they can’t live without: “He who can destroy a thing, controls it.” The Strait of Hormuz proves this, but it’s not the only inflection point where physical resources or the world’s economy is constrained.

Taiwan, for instance, produces 65% of the world’s computer chips. Taiwan also produces more than 90% of the most advanced chips. China is vulnerable, too. The Strait of Malacca moves 80% of China’s oil. There are others. In a global, interconnected world getting there first with the most men is less important, or a navy that has to hide in a corner like my cat when I turn on the vacuum. Now, the key is having the fundamental ability to control something your enemy literally can’t live without. I’ll translate for the New York Times©: Take thet stauff they gots to hav."