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Wednesday, February 11, 2026

"The Side of Russia The Media Won't Show You"

Full screen recommended.
Moscow Uncut, 2/10/26
"The Side of Russia The Media Won't Show You"

"In this video, I take you deep into the Moscow Metro during rush hour to show you a side of Russia that Western media rarely shows - the everyday lives of ordinary people. Instead of politicians, headlines, and geopolitics, this is about real Russians coming home from work, thinking about their families, finances, careers, and future. Just like people in the UK, Europe, and the US, most people here are focused on paying rent, building a stable life, saving for retirement, and finding time to relax with friends and hobbies.

As we travel through the metro, you’ll see that hopes, fears, dreams, and daily routines are remarkably similar across countries. The vast majority of people are not constantly thinking about global politics - they’re thinking about life.

This journey starts at Mayakovskaya Station, one of Moscow’s most famous stations, before heading to Belorusskaya Station. From there, we change to the Circle Line and visit the beautiful Novoslobodskaya Station, before continuing to Mendeleevskaya Station.We then travel south to Cheryomushki Station, return to the centre at Pushkinskaya Station, and continue north to Polezhaevskaya Station. From there, we join the Big Circle Line at Khoroshyovskaya Station, pass through Petrovsky Park Station, and finish at Khoroshevo and Mnyovniki Station.

Along the way, I share my thoughts on life in Russia, how similar everyday concerns are to those in the West, and why this human side of the country is so rarely shown in international media. If you’re interested in real life in Moscow, the Russian metro, travel in Russia, and honest perspectives beyond the headlines, this video is for you."
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Scottish Guy In Moscow, 2/3/26
"Russia’s Most Futuristic Metro Station! Shocking!"
"Come with my as I take you to what I think is Moscows Moscow modern and futuristic metros station - Rizhskaya on the Big Circle line. I’ll take you through and explain how it got its name. You will be blown away by the beautiful clean lines and minimalistic design"
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
"The Moscow They Don't Want You To See 🇷🇺 Russia 2026"
Comments here:

OMG...

Travelling With Russell, "Russian Typical Provincial Shopping Mall Tour"

Full screen recommended.
Travelling With Russell, 2/11/26
"Russian Typical Provincial Shopping Mall Tour"
"What does a typical Russian shopping mall look like 1,500km from Moscow? Join me on a tour of one of the first flagship/major modern department-store-style shopping centers in the city of Ufa, Russia. Bashkiriya Mall first opened in 1987."
Comments here:

"A Ton Of Snow And Severe Weather Is Coming"

Full screen recommended.
Max Velocity - Severe Weather Center, 2/11/26 3:35 AM EST
"A Ton Of Snow And Severe Weather Is Coming"
"In this video, we are talking about a TRAIN of winter storms that will dump snow across the Northeast, Rockies, and West Coast, with the risk of additional winter storms in other areas later this month across the Northern Plains and Midwest. Additionally, severe weather will likely return this weekend to the Southern Plains and Southeast, with tornadoes being possible. Get the latest details in this forecast!"
Comments here:

"A Massive Global Storm is Developing Now"

Full screen recommended.
Stefan Burns, 2/11/26
"A Massive Global Storm is Developing Now"
Geophysicist Stefan Burns reports on the incredible once-in-a-lifetime energy convergence that has begun with eclipse season and the Saturn-Neptune Great Conjunction...
Comments here:
o
Earth Evolution Energy Analytics:

"How It Really Is"

 

"The Banality of Evil and Those Who Said No"

"The Banality of Evil and Those Who Said No"
by Charles Hugh Smith

"In the Realm of the Banality of Evil, saying yes is always easy. The hard part is saying no, for reasons that have nothing to do with getting ahead.

The Epstein files have unleashed a flood tide of bleatings of innocence and accusations of guilt by association. This is just what we'd expect in the Realm of the Banality of Evil, a phrase made famous by Hannah Arendt, who described the "terrifyingly normal" participants in systems that normalize evil of the sort that "could not be traced to any particularity of wickedness, pathology or ideological conviction in the doer, whose only personal distinction was a perhaps extraordinary shallowness."

Amidst this flood tide of proclaimed innocence, consider the forgotten few who declined invitations to enter Epstein's circle of influence. While the files record those who accepted an invitation, those who said no appear to be less well documented.

Was it really that difficult to make a few inquiries about the host before saying yes? Or was the attraction of obtaining favors, funding and flattery just too powerful to resist? Or was it the promise of rubbing shoulders with the rich and powerful that was impossible to resist? Or was it the discreet promise of self-indulgence without limit?

Yet some did make inquiries and declined. Some said no. These few are forgotten, for their refusal is an indictment of the entire status quo. In the rush to declare everyone's innocence, perhaps we should first consider those who refused the invitations for self-evidently sound reasons.

In the context of the Banality of Evil, those few who said no are the only real innocents. Everyone who said yes was manifesting ordinary obedience to the perverse rulebook of America's elite class and aspirants seeking to join this elite: when it comes to self-enrichment and ambition, the only question is: can you get away with it.

In other words, there isn't a low standard of morality and ethics: there is no standard at all, a complete absence of anything but by any means available. America's elites in all the fields Epstein harvested were part of a system that made their unquestioning, automatic acceptance of the invitation inevitable.

The ideal medium for the expansion of evil is the shallow passivity of taking every opportunity to climb the ladder of power and increase one's private wealth without hesitation. Rising into the ranks of the elites in America boils down to doing everything you can get away with to get ahead without any thought for the consequences borne by others or for the sacrifice of your integrity, because integrity has no value in today's America. Even saying the word integrity makes you a chump.

In the Realm of the Banality of Evil, saying yes is always easy. The hard part is saying no, for reasons that have nothing to do with getting ahead. As Hannah Arendt wrote: "The sad truth is that most evil is done by people who never make up their minds to be good or evil."

One of the points I'm trying to make here is that the surveys of the Epstein files are prone to Survivorship bias: "the logical error of concentrating on entities that passed a selection process while overlooking those that did not." In other words, the data points of who accepted Epstein's invitations to parties (both the conventional parties of bigshots and those on his island) are becoming known, while the data points of who declined the invitations (those who said no)--and why they chose to decline/say no--are not known.

Yet those are the most interesting data points, as the few who refused to enter Epstein's circle of influence tell us more about the moral rot of our culture and the realm of the Banality of Evil than all those who joined the herd saying yes. And it was a large herd, extending into the upper reaches of virtually every sector's elite.

Self-absorbed ambition and self-gratification have no use for pondering good and evil, and that's the banality of evil that's consumed America's culture, society and economy."

"Optimism About The Future Plunges To An All-Time Record Low And Credit Card Debt Soars To An All-Time Record High"

by Michael Snyder

"As long as you have hope, you can face whatever challenges are ahead. Sadly, Americans have been losing hope at a rate that is absolutely unprecedented. As you will see below, optimism about the future has fallen to the lowest level ever recorded. One of the biggest reasons why people are losing hope is because we have been in a historic cost of living crisis for almost this entire decade. It is getting harder and harder just to pay the bills. Nobody can deny this. For most of the country, just surviving from month to month is a real struggle. When there just isn’t enough money coming in, it can be very tempting to bridge the gap with debt.

According to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, credit card debt has risen to the highest level in the entire history of the United States… Americans ended 2025 more in debt than ever before. Credit card balances hit a fresh high in the fourth quarter, rising by $44 billion to $1.28 trillion, according to a new report on household debt by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York released Tuesday. That’s a 5.5% jump from a year earlier.

The central bank’s monthly Survey of Consumer Expectations, released Monday, also found that fewer consumers expect their households’ financial situations to be better off a year from now - and a larger share expect to be worse off.

Once you start piling up credit card debt, it can be exceedingly difficult to ever get it paid off. Credit card rates are higher than ever, and this is allowing large financial institutions to rake in enormous profits. But many on the other end of the equation feel like they are suffocating. Needless to say, credit card debt is not the only type of debt that is becoming a major national problem. Delinquency rates are rising for all types of debt, and this is particularly true for low income Americans

"That’s not just apparent in the number of auto loan, credit card and home equity lines of credit delinquencies, the New York Fed researchers said. “You also see that in rising mortgage delinquency rates,” the researchers said, referring to the growing number of homeowners who are falling behind on their mortgage payments. Across the board, “elevated delinquency rates are more pronounced in the lowest-income areas,” the Fed researchers also found."

Everyone should be able to see that this crisis is not going to end well. It is just a matter of time. Americans have traditionally been very optimistic about the future, but a recent Gallup survey discovered that optimism about the future has now fallen to the lowest level ever recorded…"The percentage of U.S. adults who anticipate high-quality lives in five years declined to 59.2% in 2025, the lowest level since measurement began nearly two decades ago. Since 2020, future life ratings have fallen a total of 9.1 percentage points, projecting to an estimated 24.5 million fewer people who are optimistic about the future now versus then. Most of that decline occurred between 2021 and 2023, but the ratings dropped 3.5 points between 2024 and 2025."

Of course Americans are less optimistic about the present as well. In fact, U.S. consumer confidence just dropped to a level that we have not seen since 2014…"The most dangerous economic divergence isn’t in wealth. It’s in confidence. U.S. consumer confidence collapsed to 84.5 - it's lowest level since 2014, below even pandemic-era lows, the Conference Board recently reported. The Expectations Index fell to 65.1, well under the 80 threshold that historically signals recession. Across income levels, Americans earning under $15,000 remain the least optimistic of any group."

I am not surprised that Americans that are earning the least money are the most pessimistic. For those with very limited resources, just going to the grocery store can be a traumatic experience. From March 2025 to December 2025, the average price of beef rose nearly 20 percent…"That demand is also reflected in the meat case, where beef accounts for more than half of all fresh meat dollars, far outpacing other protein options like chicken, pork and seafood. According to U.S. Department of Agriculture data, the average price of beef in grocery stores climbed from about $8.40 per pound in March to $10.10 per pound by December 2025, a roughly 20% increase over that period."

We aren’t in the 1990s anymore. The economic environment that we are living in today is completely different from what we experienced a few decades ago. The middle class is being systematically eviscerated, and every day more Americans on the bottom half of the economic spectrum are simply giving up…"Today, the bottom half of the K-shaped economy is entering a new era. Call it the Quiet Riot.

This is the threshold where financial strain becomes behavioral exit—when people stop optimizing and start opting out. It is not through public unrest, but through millions of small, rational decisions that add up to something destabilizing: staying stuck instead of moving up, abandoning long-term planning, choosing short-term survival over long-term compounding.

It follows a simple framework. Fuel: affordability strain, debt stress, declining job quality. The oxygen is missing; a lack of agency, when people can’t see a credible path to mobility. The spark here is the shock that pushes households from “stressed but functioning” into opt-out mode. That can be job loss, medical bills, rent jump, or simply one more month where the math doesn’t work."

Most of the population is just one accident way from financial disaster. If you can avoid going to the hospital or getting laid off, you get the opportunity to try to scrape by for another month. But if the unexpected strikes, you can suddenly lose your spot in the middle class. Our society has been transformed into a very twisted game of musical chairs, and for those that get bumped out of the game each round it can be absolutely soul crushing.

Alarmingly, it appears that some near the top of the economic spectrum are also becoming very alarmed about what is coming, because last week we witnessed “a notable wave of insider selling across multiple sectors”…"This week is shaping up to be an important one for rotation trades, particularly as insider activity continues to lean heavily toward selling. On Friday, February 6, we saw a notable wave of insider selling across multiple sectors. Two transactions stood out. Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai sold 32,500 shares each of GOOG and GOOGL, while CoreWeave’s Chief Strategy Officer sold over USD 23 million worth of shares, reducing his position to zero."

Signs of trouble are erupting all around us. And if a major conflict with Iran begins during the weeks ahead, that will greatly accelerate our economic problems. It has taken decades of very bad decisions for us to reach this point, and now our society is peering down into the abyss. U.S. households are 18.8 trillion dollars in debt, the federal government is 38.5 trillion dollars in debt, and the U.S. dollar has been rapidly losing value. We have accumulated the greatest mountain of debt in the history of the world, and there is no easy way out."

"America Hits the Wall: Jobs Lost, Debt Soars, Insiders Know What’s Coming"

Jeremiah Babe, 2/10/26
"America Hits the Wall: Jobs Lost, 
Debt Soars, Insiders Know What’s Coming"
Comments here:

"The 'Empire Killer' Strikes Again"

"The 'Empire Killer' Strikes Again"
by Nick Giambruno

"One of the most potent and underappreciated forces responsible for the downfall of the most powerful empires throughout history has been debt. While military defeats, political upheavals, and external invasions often dominate historical accounts of the fall of great powers, excessive debt - the "Empire Killer" - has quietly but relentlessly eroded the foundations of empires across the centuries.

From Rome to the Soviet Union, the over-extension of resources, poor financial management, and the inability to service massive debts have led to economic collapse, social unrest, and, ultimately, the demise of these once-mighty empires. Understanding how debt has played a role in the fall of these empires gives us insight into the role it could play in the collapse of the US Empire. Here is a summary of some prominent historical examples of this clear pattern.

The Roman Empire: One of the most iconic examples of debt’s destructive force is the Roman Empire. At its height, Rome was the center of the known world, controlling vast territories, including much of Europe, North Africa, and parts of the Middle East. Maintaining a vast empire required immense financial resources. The Roman government needed to fund its sprawling military, build infrastructure such as roads and aqueducts, and support the grandeur of its capital city.

Emperors financed the resulting debt by debasing the currency - reducing the silver content in Roman coins. However, this led to rampant price increases and economic instability. The more the Roman government tried to print its way out of debt, the worse the problem became. As debt and inflation strangled the Roman economy, the empire struggled to pay its soldiers, undermining military morale and effectiveness.

Weakened by internal financial collapse, Rome became vulnerable to external threats. The combined weight of financial mismanagement, social unrest, and military decline led to the empire’s collapse.

The Spanish Empire: In the 16th century, the Spanish Empire was a global superpower. The discovery of the New World brought an influx of gold and silver, filling the Spanish government’s coffers beyond imagination. However, this newfound wealth bred complacency and extravagance. The Spanish monarchy became embroiled in costly wars across Europe - including the Eighty Years’ War with the Dutch and conflicts with France and England - and indulged in lavish expenditures without regard for fiscal sustainability.

Spain borrowed heavily from European bankers to finance its ambitions, accruing enormous debts. At first, the influx of colonial wealth allowed Spain to service its debts, but as wars dragged on, the costs began to outstrip the income from the New World. Spain’s creditworthiness diminished as the debts mounted, and the economic decline became irreversible. The inevitable consequence was a series of bankruptcies in 1557, 1575, and 1596. Each bankruptcy weakened Spain’s creditworthiness, making it more difficult to borrow money on favorable terms. The once-dominant empire lost its influence, illustrating how an abundance of wealth, when mismanaged and coupled with excessive debt, can precipitate a rapid descent from power.

The French Monarchy: The fall of the French monarchy in the late 18th century provides another stark example of how debt can destabilize a powerful country. France’s involvement in costly wars, such as the Seven Years’ War and the American Revolution, strained the country’s finances. Meanwhile, the extravagant lifestyle of the French court, epitomized by King Louis XVI and Queen Marie Antoinette, drained the treasury further. France was deeply in debt, and the government struggled to service its loans.

By the late 1780s, the French government was spending more on interest payments than its military. The French monarchy imposed heavy taxes on commoners to pay the cost of its debts, while the nobility and clergy were largely exempt. It led to widespread anger among the population, fueling social unrest. In 1789, the situation reached a tipping point, igniting the French Revolution.

When empires reach the late stages of the debt cycle, they don’t regain discipline - they reset the system. Today’s exploding debt, rising interest costs, and currency debasement point to the same outcome: a more centralized, digital reset that protects government solvency while quietly transferring wealth from the unprepared to those who act early.

The Qing Dynasty: The Qing Dynasty was the last imperial dynasty of China. It was a leading world economic power, but spending and foreign borrowing in the 19th century was a significant factor in its decline. The Qing Dynasty faced enormous financial strain due to prolonged conflicts, including the Opium Wars, the Taiping Rebellion, and the Boxer Rebellion. These wars forced the Qing Dynasty to borrow heavily from foreign lenders. The Qing government increased taxes on peasants and small landholders to manage its debt. The tax burden, widespread corruption, and inefficiency in the imperial bureaucracy led to social discontent and weakened the central authority’s control over the provinces. Debt was a critical factor that exacerbated the already unstable political and social situation in the late Qing Dynasty.

The British Empire: The sun never set on the British Empire at the height of its power. However, the two World Wars strained the empire’s resources beyond its limits. The cost of fighting in WW1 and WW2 left Britain deeply in debt, particularly to the US. The financial strain of debt made maintaining control over its vast territories impossible, and Britain’s role as a world superpower diminished. The pound ceased being the world’s leading reserve currency.

How Debt Destroys Empires: A Familiar Pattern: The typical pattern in these examples of collapsing empires (and numerous others I didn’t have time to mention) is:

Stage #1: Empires achieve success and become overconfident.
Stage #2: Overconfidence leads to extravagant spending on luxuries and wars.
Stage #3: Empires finance this lavish spending by going into debt.
Stage #4: The debt grows to an unsustainable level and creates a crushing burden.
Stage #5: Empires finance the debt through taxation and currency debasement.
Stage #6: The populace bears the brunt of debt repayment as empires raise taxes and debase the currency - to the maximum extent - until it causes internal instability.
Stage #7: Empires cannot finance their militaries because of their debt burden. This is usually the tipping point.
Stage #8: Underfunded militaries plus internal instability make empires vulnerable to foreign invasion, domestic revolution, civil war, and other existential dangers.
Stage #9: The empire collapses.

The US federal government has the biggest debt in the history of the world. And it’s continuing to grow at a rapid, unstoppable pace. While the US government can extend the charade of solvency longer than any other entity on the planet, not even the most powerful empires in human history can do so forever, particularly when they start to struggle to pay the interest costs. The situation has reached a tipping point. That’s because the federal debt’s annualized interest cost exceeded the defense budget for the first time last year. It’s on track to exceed Social Security and become the BIGGEST item in the federal budget.

As a result, the US Empire is somewhere between Stage #6 and #7 in the empire collapse pattern I described above. History rarely repeats in perfect detail - but it does rhyme, and the rhyme is getting louder. When an empire hits the late stages of the debt cycle, the real damage doesn’t arrive with a headline or a single crash. It shows up in the quiet erosion of purchasing power, the creeping "emergency" policies, and the accelerating need to debase currency just to keep the machine running.

If the US really is drifting from Stage #6 toward Stage #7, then this isn’t just an abstract history lesson - it’s a live setup. And the people who come through periods like this intact are usually the ones who recognize the pattern early and position themselves before the crowd is forced to react."
o
"National Debt Clock"

"Grocery Prices Are Skyrocketing... Be Ready For The Collapse"

Adventures With Danno, 2/10/26
"Grocery Prices Are Skyrocketing... 
Be Ready For The Collapse"
Comments here:

"Why Hasn't The Economy Collapsed Yet?"

Full screen recommended.
Michael Bordenaro, 2/10/26
"Why Hasn't The Economy Collapsed Yet?"
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o
Steve James, 2/10/26
"Something Is Very Different, 
We All Feel Something Bad Is Coming"
"We all feel it, that sense that something bad is coming with the way the world is going. That those of us who don't fit in may be in trouble as we think differently, and are critical and sane in our way of looking at things. We don't trust how things have been handled, and understandably so."
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"Another Bank Failure Just Happened, And Something Worse Is Coming"

Full screen recommended.
Epic Economist, 2/10/26
"Another Bank Failure Just Happened, 
And Something Worse Is Coming"

"Metropolitan Capital Bank and Trust in Chicago was shut down by state regulators due to unsafe and unsound conditions. It was the first U.S. bank failure of the year and many experts believe it won't be the last. In this video, we look at what people across the country are saying about the state of the banking system, why so many Americans are losing trust in their banks, and what warning signs are flashing right now in the financial markets. From regional banks weighed down by commercial real estate losses to subprime auto lenders buckling under rising defaults, cracks are forming in multiple places at once. And it's not just small banks feeling the pressure. People are sharing stories of being questioned or delayed when trying to withdraw their own money from major institutions. That kind of experience changes how people see the system and once that trust is broken, it's very hard to rebuild. 

We also look at the deeper structural issues that got us here. Years of near-zero interest rates led banks to load up on long-duration bonds that are now underwater. The Federal Reserve's policies created a cycle where risk was encouraged and consequences were delayed but not eliminated. Now, with inflation still elevated and the yield curve flashing recession signals, the foundation of the lending system is under serious strain. On top of all that, capital is moving. Gold and silver are surging. Stablecoins are growing rapidly as people look for alternatives to traditional bank deposits. The American Bankers Association has even started calling for regulatory protection which tells you something about how the industry itself views the situation. In this video, we hear from former Wall Street professionals, financial commentators, and everyday people who are all asking the same question: is my money actually safe? Some are moving funds to credit unions. Others are shifting into Treasury-backed instruments or hard assets. And some are simply holding more cash outside of the banking system altogether.

 But there's another side to this conversation that matters just as much. When fear drives everyone to act at once pulling money out, shifting assets, it creates consequences for people who don't have the resources or the information to move as quickly. This isn't about fear. It's about awareness. Understanding what's happening in the financial system, recognizing the signs, and making thoughtful decisions about how to protect yourself and your family without adding to the problem for everyone else. Let us know in the comments what you think about the current state of the banking system and what steps, if any, you're taking right now. We always read your responses and appreciate the conversation."
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Tuesday, February 10, 2026

"The Great Deception of Modern Society"

Full screen recommended.
The Psyche, 
"The Great Deception of Modern Society"
"In this video, we uncover the illusions that shape modern life: the false ideals of success, the endless distractions of consumerism, and the invisible systems that quietly dictate how we think, act, and even see ourselves. Drawing on the wisdom of philosophers like Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, and Jung, we’ll explore how modern culture keeps us busy, obedient, and disconnected from our true selves. Discover why so many people feel empty despite having more comfort and technology than any generation before, and how this emptiness may actually be your soul rebelling against the illusion. Most importantly, learn how to awaken, reclaim your authenticity, and begin living from a place of true freedom and meaning. Stay until the end, because the final revelation will change how you see not only society - but yourself."
Comments here:

"Look To This Day..."

"Look to this day
for it is life,
the very life of life.
In its brief course lie all
the realities and truths of existence,
the joy of growth ,
the splendor of action,
the glory of power.
For yesterday is but a memory,
And tomorrow is only a vision.
But today well lived
makes every yesterday a memory
of happiness,
and every tomorrow a vision of hope.
Look well, therefore, to this day..."

- Kalidasa

The Poet: David Romano, "If Tomorrow Starts Without Me"

David Romano, "If Tomorrow Starts Without Me"
Read by Tom O'Bedlam
o
Full screen recommended.
"Dog's Last Day"
So sadly beautiful...

Musical Interlude: 2002, "An Ocean Apart"

Full screen recommended.
2002, "An Ocean Apart"

"A Look to the Heavens"

“Over 400,000 light years across NGC 6872 is an enormous spiral galaxy, at least 4 times the size of our own very large Milky Way. About 200 million light-years distant, toward the southern constellation Pavo, the Peacock, the remarkable galaxy’s stretched out shape is due to its ongoing gravitational interaction, likely leading to an eventual merger, with the nearby smaller galaxy IC 4970. IC 4970 is seen just below and right of the giant galaxy’s core in this cosmic color portrait from the 8 meter Gemini South telescope in Chile.
The idea to image this titanic galaxy collision comes from a winning contest essay submitted last year to the Gemini Observatory by the Sydney Girls High School Astronomy Club. In addition to inspirational aspects and aesthetics, club members argued that a color image would be more than just a pretty picture. In their winning essay they noted that “If enough color data is obtained in the image it may reveal easily accessible information about the different populations of stars, star formation, relative rate of star formation due to the interaction, and the extent of dust and gas present in these galaxies.”

Dan, I Allegedly, "There Are No Jobs - It's All Fake"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 2/10/26
"There Are No Jobs - It's All Fake"
"The job market is more broken than most people realize. Millions of Americans are applying for jobs that don’t actually exist, while others are being pushed into a disturbing new trend called “reverse recruiting”- where job seekers pay recruiters just to get an interview. According to the Wall Street Journal and multiple studies, as many as 28 - 32% of online job listings may be fake, posted only to collect resumes, signal growth, or give the illusion that companies are hiring when they’re not. In this video, I break down how ghost jobs are distorting the economy, why desperate workers are paying a percentage of their salary just to be introduced to hiring managers, and what this means for anyone trying to earn a living right now. This isn’t a skills issue - it’s a system failure. If you’re sending out resumes and getting nothing back, you’re not crazy. The hiring system is upside down, and it’s getting worse."
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"Stores Are Quietly Targeting the Wealthy… And It’s Bad News"

Full screen recommended.
Snyder Reports, 2/10/26
"Stores Are Quietly Targeting the Wealthy… 
And It’s Bad News"
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Lindey Glenn, 2/10/26
"Customers Are Catching Walmart
Overcharging by Weight - Again"
"Customers are calling out Walmart after discovering that food items labeled by weight don’t always match what’s actually on the scale. From packaged meats to pantry staples, people are weighing their groceries at home and finding major discrepancies between what the label claims and what they actually received - meaning customers may be paying more per pound than they realize.

This isn’t the first time Walmart has faced scrutiny over inaccurate food weights. In the past, the company has been sued and paid out millions in settlements over similar issues. Now, TikTok creators are once again exposing the problem with side-by-side weigh-ins that are going viral. In this video, we break down the new receipts, explain why pricing by weight matters, and why customers are questioning how often this is happening - and how long it’s been going on. If you shop at Walmart, this is something you need to see."
Comments here:

"Why the 2026 Financial Crisis Will Be Worse Than 2008"

Full screen recommended.
Unify Economy, 2/10/26
"Why the 2026 Financial Crisis Will Be Worse Than 2008"

"The 2026 financial crisis will be fundamentally different - and far more dangerous - than what we experienced in 2008. Here's why:
5 Converging Crises:
1 .Commercial Real Estate Collapse - $930B in loans maturing.
2. China's Property Market Implosion - 40% decline in sales.
3. Global Sovereign Debt Crisis - $251 trillion total debt.
4. Central Banks Out of Ammunition - Only 150 basis points left to cut.
5. Geopolitical Fragmentation - Trade wars & supply chain chaos.

In 2008, the Federal Reserve had powerful tools: they cut rates 525 basis points and launched QE for the first time. It worked. In 2026, they can only cut 150 basis points, QE has been exhausted after 4 rounds, and government debt is at 125% of GDP with no room for bailouts.

⚠️ 10 Indicators To Watch: • Dollar-Yen Exchange Rate • 10-Year Treasury Yield • Credit Spreads (High Yield) • Regional Bank ETF (KRE) • China PMI • VIX Fear Index • US Unemployment Rate • Commercial Real Estate Delinquencies • Fed Funds Rate • Buffett Indicator (Market Cap/GDP)
If 3 indicators flash red → Be cautious. If 5 flash red → Reduce stock exposure. If 7+ flash red → Go defensive immediately."
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended.
Crisis Capital, 2/10/26
"It's Over: Insurance Companies Collapsing
 (Your Policies at Risk)"

"Insurance companies are failing right now and most policyholders have no idea how exposed they really are. In this video, Andrew John breaks down the accelerating collapse inside the insurance industry and why millions of homeowners, drivers, and business owners are discovering too late that their policies are conditional promises, not guarantees. This is not speculation and it’s not fear content. It’s a structural analysis of what happens when underwriting losses, climate-driven claims, and underwater investment portfolios collide.

You’ll learn why insurer insolvencies surged in late 2025, how rising catastrophe losses and interest rate shocks are draining capital reserves, and why state guaranty funds are not designed to protect you in a wave of multi-state insurance failures. This video explains how combined ratios above 100 percent quietly destroy insurers, why long-duration bond portfolios have become a liability, and how correlated climate events are breaking the insurance pooling model itself.

Andrew walks through real examples of insurers entering receivership, what happens to your coverage when a carrier fails, and why policy limits enforced by guaranty funds can leave you massively underinsured. If you assume your insurance company will always pay, this breakdown explains why that assumption no longer holds.

This video also connects the insurance crisis to broader financial system stress, including rising interest rates, bond market losses, reinsurance withdrawal, regulatory price controls, and the growing reliance on state-backed insurers of last resort. These forces are not temporary. They are structural, and they are accelerating.

Most importantly, you’ll get a clear action framework for what to do next. How to evaluate your insurer’s financial strength, understand guaranty fund limits, increase liquidity, diversify geographic and carrier exposure, and reduce reliance on a system that is already failing in slow motion. If you own property, run a business, or rely on insurance to protect your wealth, this video lays out what’s happening now and what decisions matter before failures start clustering. Watch closely. The preparation window is shrinking."
Comments here:
o
Full screen recommended
ITM Trading, 2/10/26
"$11T Funding Crisis: Fed Trapped as 
Treasury Ponzi Fails, Your Money at Risk"
"The Federal Reserve just added nearly $100 billion in Treasury bills to its balance sheet in a matter of eight weeks. Wall Street calls it "technical operations." But those of us paying attention know better. This is monetary intervention - and it's signaling something far more dangerous: the Fed has hit a wall. The balance sheet, which was supposed to shrink under Quantitative Tightening (QT), has reversed course. The Fed balance sheet is growing again, and the consequences for your dollar, savings, and retirement are profound."
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The Daily "Near You?"

Kinsman, Ohio, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"The Gospel of Ignorance"

"The Gospel of Ignorance"
by Paul Rosenberg

"The good news about ignorance? Yes, and emphatically yes. The good news about ignorance is that it sets us free from mental chains. Now, to be clear, what I’m talking about here is accepting and admitting our ignorance. This is essential if we want to actually know things, as opposed to making a show of knowing things. And I can tell you from personal experience that it really works. I gained the habit of admitting my ignorance (almost advertising it) back in the early 1980s, and that habit has helped me toward more understanding and discovery than I’d be able to itemize.

The School Model: Most people pull back from admitting their ignorance, and while the roots of the problem are probably very old, I’m convinced that it has been supercharged by factory-style schooling; that is, by the government schools nearly all children are forced to attend. The universal model of schooling over the past century has been “memorize and repeat.” And so expressing the right answer has become grounds for praise and expressing the wrong answer has become grounds for ridicule.

In fact, getting the wrong answer in school very often spawns public ridicule, from other kids or from the teacher. Bear in mind that public ridicule is among the harsher blows a young psyche can take. And so the instinct to avoid such blows sticks. People are wildly evasive of being shown wrong.

Because of this, people stay far away from admitting ignorance. That’s a silly thing to do, of course – we’re all ignorant of a great many things – but emotional damage tends to override reason. This, however, locks us out of further inquiry. When we see a situation steering us toward possible ridicule we shut it down; all that matters is getting away. And thus learning is evaded right along with the possibility of pain.

The Lust For An Ultimate Ruleset: Just behind the terror of ridicule comes a quest for an unassailable ruleset. And while I won’t take the space to dig deeply into this, I will make one essential point: We cling to rulesets because they save us from responsibility. The ruleset becomes the responsible party, saving us from exposure and the possibility of blame. And once this is in place, our lives descend into unending arguments over which ruleset is right. Please re-read that a few times and give it some thought.

We’re probably millennia away from anything resembling a perfect ruleset, if such a thing is possible at all. Pretending to have such a ruleset, however, locks us into it, and locks us into defending those parts of it that are either partial or wrong… and at this stage of human development every ruleset will be full of such things. When we latch on to a dogma – a doctrine, a political movement, a metaphysics, whatever – we cut ourselves off from proper humility and we erect barriers to further knowledge. We need to get past this.

What We Once Had: Political ideologies have become weaponized rulesets in recent times. By rejecting your rules (and vocabulary) the other party becomes wrong, crazy, deranged, and so on. The foundation of Western civilization, however, was very much otherwise. Here’s how professor Carol Quigley explained it: "Western Civilization… might be summed-up in the belief that “Truth unfolds through time in a communal process.”

This is a great core of Western civilization, if not the core. Westerners use phrases like “we know that…” or “we have no information on…” Every time we use such words, we presume that truth is built, that all of us may contribute to it, and that we will certainly have more truth in the future than we have now. But if the final truth is yet to be discovered, who can say that he or she has full knowledge?

By becoming clear on the fact that we don’t know ultimates and ends, we both consolidate what we do know and open a door to learning… moving toward the day when we can properly conceive of ultimates and ends. Western civilization was never pure, of course, but this belief went a long way toward bringing us forward.

Say It Loud And Say It Proud: So, when something comes up that you don’t know, say it loudly and clearly: “I don’t know.” “I’m ignorant about that.” By doing this you open your mind and tell the world (as well as yourself) that you’re strong enough to portray yourself honestly… that you’re no longer terrified of being wrong. It’s the sensible thing to do, and it works."

"It takes considerable knowledge just to
realize the extent of your own ignorance." 
- Thomas Sowell

"Doug Casey on the End of Western Civilization"

"Doug Casey on the End of Western Civilization"
by International Man

Interviewer: “What do you think of Western Civilization?”
 Gandhi: “I think it would be a good idea.”

"International Man: The decline of Western Civilization is on a lot of people’s minds. Let’s talk about this trend.

Doug Casey: Western Civilization has its origins in ancient Greece. It’s unique among the world’s civilizations in putting the individual - as opposed to the collective - in a central position. It enshrined logic and rational thought - as opposed to mysticism and superstition - as the way to deal with the world. It’s because of this that we have science, technology, great literature and art, capitalism, personal freedom, the concept of progress, and much, much more. In fact, almost everything worth having in the material world is due to Western Civilization.

Ayn Rand once said "East minus West equals zero." I think she went a bit too far, as a rhetorical device, but she was essentially right. When you look at what the world’s other civilizations have brought to the party, at least over the last 2,500 years, it’s trivial.

I lived in the Orient for years. There are many things I love about it - martial arts, yoga, and the cuisine among them. But all the progress they’ve made is due to adopting the fruits of the West.

International Man: There are so many things degrading Western Civilization. Where do we begin?

Doug Casey: It’s been said, correctly, that a civilization always collapses from within. World War 1, in 1914, signaled the start of the long collapse of Western Civilization. Of course, termites were already eating away at the foundations, with the writings of people like Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Karl Marx. It’s been on an accelerating downward path ever since, even though technology and science have been improving at a quantum pace. They are, however, like delayed action flywheels, operating on stored energy and accumulated capital. Without capital, intellectual freedom, and entrepreneurialism, science and technology will slow down. I’m optimistic we’ll make it to Kurzweil’s Singularity, but there are no guarantees.

Things also changed with the creation of the Federal Reserve in 1913. Before that, the US used gold coinage for money. "The dollar" was just a name for 1/20th of an ounce of gold. That is what the dollar was. Paper dollars were just receipts for gold on deposit in the Treasury. The income tax, enacted the same year, threw more sand in the gears of civilization. The world was much freer before the events of 1913 and 1914, which acted to put the State at the center of everything.

The Fed and the income tax are both disastrous and unnecessary things, enemies of the common man in every way. Unfortunately, people have come to believe they’re fixtures in the cosmic firmament. They’re the main reasons - there are many other reasons, though, unfortunately - why the average American’s standard of living has been dropping since the early 1970s. In fact, were it not for these things, and the immense amount of capital destroyed during the numerous wars of the last 100 years, I expect we’d have already colonized the moon and Mars. Among many other things…

But I want to re-emphasize that the science, the technology, and all the wonderful toys we have are not the essence of Western Civilization. They’re consequences of individualism, capitalism, rational thought, and personal freedom. It’s critical not to confuse cause and effect.

International Man: You mentioned that the average American’s standard of living has dropped since the early 1970s. This is directly related to the US government abandoning the dollar’s last link to gold in 1971. Since then, the Federal Reserve has been able to debase the US dollar without limit. I think the dollar’s transformation into a purely fiat currency has eroded the rule of law and morality in the US. It’s similar to what happened in the Roman Empire after it started debasing its currency. What do you think, Doug?

Doug Casey: All the world’s governments and central banks share a common philosophy, which drives these policies. They believe that you create economic activity by stimulating demand, and you stimulate demand by printing money. And, of course, it’s true, in a way. Roughly the same way a counterfeiter can stimulate a local economy.

Unfortunately, they ignore that, and completely ignore that the way a person or a society becomes wealthy is by producing more than they consume and saving the difference. That difference, savings, is how you create capital. Without capital you’re reduced to subsistence, scratching at the earth with a stick. These people think that by inflating - which is to say destroying - the currency, they can create prosperity. But what they’re really doing, is destroying capital: When you destroy the value of the currency, that discourages people from saving it. And when people don’t save, they can’t build capital, and the vicious cycle goes on.

This is destructive for civilization itself, in both the long term and the short term. The more paper money, the more credit, they create, the more society focuses on finance, as opposed to production. It’s why there are many times more people studying finance than science. The focus is increasingly on speculation, not production. Financial engineering, not mechanical, electrical, or chemical engineering. And lots of laws and regulations to keep the unstable structure from collapsing.

What keeps a truly civil society together isn’t laws, regulations, and police. It’s peer pressure, social opprobrium, moral approbation, and your reputation. These are the four elements that keep things together. Western Civilization is built on voluntarism. But, as the State grows, that’s being replaced by coercion in every aspect of society. There are regulations on the most obscure areas of life. As Harvey Silverglate pointed out in his book, the average American commits three felonies a day. Whether he’s caught and prosecuted is a subject of luck and the arbitrary will of some functionary. That’s antithetical to the core values of Western Civilization.

International Man: Speaking of ancient civilizations like Rome, interest rates are about the lowest they’ve been in 5,000 years of recorded history. Trillions of dollars’ worth of government bonds trade at negative yields. Of course, this couldn’t happen in a free market. It’s only possible because of central bank manipulation. How will artificially low interest rates affect the collapse of Western Civilization?

Doug Casey: It’s really, really serious. I previously thought it was metaphysically impossible to have negative interest rates but, in the Bizarro World central banks have created, it’s happened.

Negative interest rates discourage saving. Once again, saving is what builds capital. Without capital you wind up as an empty shell - Rome in 450 A.D., or Detroit today - lots of wonderful but empty buildings and no economic activity. Worse, it forces people to desperately put their money in all manner of idiotic speculations in an effort to stay ahead of inflation. They wind up chasing the bubbles the funny money creates.

Let me re-emphasize something: in order for science and technology to advance you need capital. Where does capital come from? It comes from people producing more than they consume and saving the difference. Debt, on the other hand, means you’re living above your means. You’re either consuming the capital others have saved, or you’re mortgaging your future.

Zero and negative interest rate policies, and the creation of money out of nowhere, are actually destructive of civilization itself. It makes the average guy feel that he’s not in control of his own destiny. He starts believing that the State, or luck, or Allah will provide for him. That attitude is typical of people from backward parts of the world - not Western Civilization.

International Man: What does it say about the economy and society that people work so hard to interpret what officials from the Federal Reserve and other central banks say?

Doug Casey: It’s a shameful waste of time. They remind me of primitives seeking the counsel of witch doctors. One hundred years ago, the richest people in the country - the Rockefellers, the Carnegies, and such - made their money creating industries that actually made stuff. Now, the richest people in the country just shuffle money around. They get rich because they’re close to the government and the hydrant of currency materialized by the Federal Reserve. I’d say it’s a sign that society in the US has become quite degraded. The world revolves much less around actual production, but around guessing the direction of financial markets. Negative interest rates are creating bubbles, and will eventually result in an economic collapse.

International Man: Negative interest rates are essentially a tax on savings. A lot of people would rather pull their money out of the bank and stuff it under a mattress than suffer that sting. The economic central planners know this. It’s why they’re using negative interest rates to ramp up the War on Cash - the push to eliminate paper currency and create a cashless society.

The banking system is very fragile. Banks don’t hold much paper cash. It’s mostly digital bytes on a computer. If people start withdrawing paper money en masse, it won’t take much to bring the whole system down. Their solution is to make accessing cash harder, and in some cases, illegal. That’s why the economic witch doctors at Harvard are pounding the table to get rid of the $100 bill.

Take France, for example. It’s now illegal to make cash transactions over €1,000 without documenting them properly. Negative interest rates have turbocharged the War on Cash. If the central planners win this war, it would be the final deathblow to financial privacy. How does this all relate to the collapse of Western Civilization?

Doug Casey: I believe the next step in their idiotic plan is to abolish cash. Decades ago they got rid of gold coinage, which used to circulate day to day in people’s pockets. Then they got rid of silver coinage. Now, they’re planning to get rid of cash altogether. So you won’t even have euros or dollars or pounds in your wallet anymore, or if you do, it will only be very small denominations. Everything else is going to have to be done through electronic payment processing.

This is a huge disaster for the average person: absolutely everything that you buy or sell, other than perhaps a candy bar or a hamburger, is going to have to go through the banking system. Thus, the government will be able to monitor every transaction and payment. Financial privacy, even what’s left of it today, will literally cease to exist.

Privacy is one of the big differences between a civilized society and a primitive society. In a primitive society, in your little dirt hut village, anybody can look through your window or pull back the flap on your tent. You have no privacy. Everybody can hear everything; see anything. This was one of the marvelous things about Western Civilization- privacy was valued, and respected. But that concept, like so many others, is on its way out…

International Man: You’ve mentioned before that language and words provide important clues to the collapse of Western Civilization. How so?

Doug Casey: Many of the words you hear, especially on television and other media, are confused, conflated, or completely misused. Many recent changes in the way words are used are corrupting the language. As George Orwell liked to point out, to control language is to control thought. The corruption of language is adding to the corruption of civilization itself. This is not a trivial factor in the degradation of Western Civilization.

Words - their exact meanings, and how they’re used - are critically important. If you don’t mean what you say and say what you mean, then it’s impossible to communicate accurately. Forget about transmitting philosophical concepts.

Take for example shareholders and stakeholders. We all know that a shareholder actually owns a share in a company, but have you noticed that over the last generation shareholders have become less important than stakeholders? Even though stakeholders are just hangers-on, employees, or people who are looking to get in on a shakedown. But everybody slavishly acknowledges, "Yes, we’ve got to look out for the stakeholders."

Where did that concept come from? It’s a recent creation, but Boobus americanus seems to think it was carved in stone at the country’s founding. We’re told to protect them, as if they were a valuable and endangered species. I say, "A pox upon stakeholders." If they want a vote in what a company does, then they ought to become shareholders. Stakeholders are a class of being created out of nothing by Cultural Marxists for the purpose of shaking down shareholders.

Right now, the US is the most polarized it has been since the Civil War. The next couple of weeks could be the most chaotic period in US history. The stakes are higher than they’ve ever been in living memory. The consequences of this could be crippling to the average person."

"We Are All Born Mad..."

 
Seal, "Crazy"

"The Gods Laugh At Your Plans: Chekhov, Jaspers, And Life-changing Moments"

"The Gods Laugh At Your Plans: 
Chekhov, Jaspers, And Life-changing Moments"
The most momentous and significant events in our lives 
are the ones we do not see coming. Life is defined by the unforeseen.
by Jonny Thomson

"You’re in the shower one day, and you feel a lump that wasn’t there before. You’re having lunch when your phone rings with an unknown number: there’s been a crash. You come home and your husband is holding a suitcase. “I’m leaving,” he says.

Life is inevitably punctuated by sudden changes. At one moment, we might have everything laid out before us, and then an invisible wall stops us in our tracks. It might be an illness, a bereavement, an accident or some bad news, but life has a habit of mocking those who make plans. We can have our eyes on some distant shore, some faraway horizon, only to find everything come crashing down by the most unseen of events. As the Scottish poet Robert Burns wrote, “The best laid schemes o’ Mice an’ Men. Gang aft agley” (often go wrong).

In Anton Chekhov’s remarkable play, "The Seagull," we meet a cast of characters who are all, in some way, in love with something. The young, idealistic artist Konstantin is in love with the idea of pure art. Arkadin, his mother, is in love with her fans and her celebrity. Konstantin’s girlfriend, Nina, is in love with becoming rich and famous. Everyone in the play has some kind of ambition and plan, or they live in regret over the life they chose. They rail against how misguided or mistaken their life has been, while longing for something else.

They are each like a seagull, flying over the sea or a great lake, and aiming purposefully for the shore. The view up there is wonderful. But the longer the seagull flies, the more oblivious they are to how they tire or weaken. They’re so fixated on some distant horizon that they’re at the mercy to life’s sudden changes. They’re blinkered and distracted, and the gods love nothing more than the hopeful hubris of mankind.

At one point in the play, Chekov has the character Trigorin recount a short story about a gull flying over a lake who’s, “happy and free.” But in the next moment, “a man sees her who happens to come that way, and he destroys her out of idleness.” The seagull is killed, its flight and plans annihilated, in one instant of random thoughtlessness.

Boundary Situations: While so much of our lives are spent in planning and preparation, the most transformative and significant moments are those which come at us out of the blue. These are what the psychiatrist Karl Jaspers called “boundary situations” - the ones we cannot initiate, plan, or avoid. We can only “encounter” them. These are not the mundane, everyday parts of our life - what Jaspers calls “situation being” - but rather they are things which thunder down to shake the foundations of our being. They change who we are. Although these “boundary situations” (sometimes called “limit situations”) change a bit in Jaspers’ works, he broadly sorted them into four categories:

Death: Death is the source of all our fear. We fear our loved ones dying, and we fear the moment and fact of our own death. When we know grief and despair, or when we reflect on mortality, we are transformed. We always know about death, but when it’s a boundary situation, it comes crashing into our lives like some grim scythe; an unforeseen curtain call. The awareness and subjective encounter with death transforms us.

Struggle: Life is a struggle. We work for food, compete for resources, and vie with each other for power, prestige, and status in almost every context there is. As such, there are moments when we are inevitably overcome and defeated, but also when we are victorious and champion. The final outcomes of struggle are often sudden and great, and they make us who we are.

Guilt: Hopefully, there comes a moment for each of us when we finally accept responsibility for things. For many, it comes with adulthood, but for others it comes much later still. It’s the awareness that our actions impact all around us, and our decisions echo into the world. It’s seeing the damage or tears we’ve caused. It’s to recognize that, however small or big, we’ve hurt and upset someone. It’s a profound pull of the heart that changes how we live, and it often comes on unexpectedly.

Chance: No matter how neat and ordered we might want our world to be, there will always be a messy, chaotic, and unpredictable exception. We can hope for the best, and make the plans we want, but we can never take a steering handle on the facts that will affect our existence. According to Jaspers, we each prefer, “assembling functional and explanatory structures… whose central axis lies in sufficient reason” and yet, “despite this, it is not possible for man to control and explain everything. In fact, day by day he faces events that he cannot call anything else other than coincidences or hazards.” We want order, and regularity. What we get is the mercurial and capricious throes of chance.

The best laid plans: What Chekhov’s Seagull and Jaspers’ “boundary situations” get right is that we are each much more vulnerable than we might want to allow. A wedding, three years and a fortune to plan, is ruined by a stomach bug. An hour-long journey home for Christmas winds up getting you stuck in the traffic of a freak snowstorm. A lifetime achievement is overshadowed by a national disaster. Our lives are defined by the unforeseen. We have our dreams, hopes and are flying to some faraway shore. Yet life doesn’t care. Around every corner, at every flap of our wings, everything can change."
If you caught a glimpse of your own death,
would that knowledge change the way you live the rest of your life?"
- Paco Ahlgren, "Discipline"