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Wednesday, March 11, 2026

"Asking For Trouble..."

“We’ve all heard the warnings and we’ve ignored them. We push our luck. We roll the dice. It’s human nature. When we’re told not to touch something we usually do even if we know better. Maybe because deep down, we’re just asking for trouble.”
- “Meredith Grey”, “Gray’s Anatomy”

“The Last Night of the World”

“The Last Night of the World”
Originally published in the February 1951 issue of "Esquire."
by Ray Bradbury

“What would you do if you knew this was the last night of the world?”
“What would I do; you mean, seriously?”
“Yes, seriously.”
“I don’t know – I hadn’t thought.” She turned the handle of the silver coffeepot toward him and placed the two cups in their saucers. He poured some coffee. In the background, the two small girls were playing blocks on the parlor rug in the light of the green hurricane lamps. There was an easy, clean aroma of brewed coffee in the evening air.
“Well, better start thinking about it,” he said.
“You don’t mean it?” said his wife.
He nodded.
“A war?”
He shook his head.
“Not the hydrogen or atom bomb?”
“No.”
“Or germ warfare?”
“None of those at all,” he said, stirring his coffee slowly and staring into its black depths. “But just the closing of a book, let’s say.”
“I don’t think I understand.”
“No, nor do I really. It’s jut a feeling; sometimes it frightens me, sometimes I’m not frightened at all – but peaceful.” He glanced in at the girls and their yellow hair shining in the bright lamplight, and lowered his voice. “I didn’t say anything to you. It first happened about four nights ago.”
“What?”
“A dream I had. I dreamt that it was all going to be over and a voice said it was; not any kind of voice I can remember, but a voice anyway, and it said things would stop here on Earth. I didn’t think too much about it when I awoke the next morning, but then I went to work and the feeling as with me all day. I caught Stan Willis looking out the window in the middle of the afternoon and I said, ‘Penny for your thoughts, Stan,’ and he said, ‘I had a dream last night,’ and before he even told me the dream, I knew what it was. I could have told him, but he told me and I listened to him.”
“It was the same dream?”
“Yes. I told Stan I had dreamed it, too. He didn’t seem surprised. He relaxed, in fact. Then we started walking through offices, for the hell of it. It wasn’t planned. We didn’t say, let’s walk around. We just walked on our own, and everywhere we saw people looking at their desks or their hands or out the windows and not seeing what was in front of their eyes. I talked to a few of them; so did Stan.”
“And all of them had dreamed?”
“All of them. The same dream, with no difference.”
“Do you believe in the dream?”
“Yes. I’ve never been more certain.”
“And when will it stop? The world, I mean.”
“Sometime during the night for us, and then, as the night goes on around the world, those advancing portions will go, too. It’ll take twenty-four hours for it all to go.”
They sat awhile not touching their coffee. Then they lifted it slowly and drank, looking at each other.
“Do we deserve this?” she said.
“It’s not a matter of deserving, it’s just that things didn’t work out. I notice you didn’t even argue about this. Why not?”
“I guess I have a reason,” she said.
“The same reason everyone at the office had?”
She nodded. “I didn’t want to say anything. It happened last night. And the women on the block are talking about it, just among themselves.” She picked up the evening paper and held it toward him. “There’s nothing in the news about it.”
“No, everyone knows, so what’s the need?” He took the paper and sat back in his chair, looking at the girls and then at her. “Are you afraid?”
“No. Not even for the children. I always thought I would be frightened to death, but I’m not.”
“Where’s that spirit of self-preservation the scientists talk about so much?”
“I don’t know. You don’t get too excited when you feel things are logical. This is logical. Nothing else but this could have happened from the way we’ve lived.”
“We haven’t been too bad, have we?”
“No, nor enormously good. I suppose that’s the trouble. We haven’t been very much of anything except us, while a big part of the world was busy being lots of quite awful things.”
The girls were laughing in the parlor as they waved their hands and tumbled down their house of blocks.
“I always imagined people would be screaming in the streets at a time like this.”
“I guess not. You don’t scream about the real thing.”
“Do you know, I won’t miss anything but you and the girls. I never liked cities or autos or factories or my work or anything except you three. I won’t miss a thing except my family and perhaps the change in the weather and a glass of cool water when the weather’s hot, or the luxury of sleeping. Just little things, really. How can we sit here and talk this way?”
“Because there’s nothing else to do.”
“That’s it, of course, for if there were, we’d be doing it. I suppose this is the first time in the history of the world that everyone has really known just what they were going to be doing during the last night.”
“I wonder what everyone else will do now, this evening, for the next few hours.”
“Go to a show, listen to the radio, watch the TV, play cards, put the children to bed, get to bed themselves, like always.”
“In a way that’s something to be proud of – like always.”
“We’re not all bad.”
They sat a moment and then he poured more coffee. “Why do you suppose it’s tonight?”
“Because.”
“Why not some night in the past ten years of in the last century, or five centuries ago or ten?”
“Maybe it’s because it was never February 30, 1951, ever before in history, and now it is and that’s it, because this date means more than any other date ever meant and because it’s the year when things are as they are all over the world and that’s why it’s the end.”
“There are bombers on their course both ways across the ocean tonight that’ll never see land again.”
“That’s part of the reason why.”
“Well,” he said. “What shall it be? Wash the dishes?”
They washed the dishes carefully and stacked them away with especial neatness. At eight-thirty the girls were put to bed and kissed good night and the little lights by their beds turned on and the door left a trifle open.
“I wonder,” said the husband, coming out and looking back, standing there with his pipe for a moment.”
“What?”
“If the door should be shut all the way or if it should be left just a little ajar so we can hear them if they call.”
“I wonder if the children know – if anyone mentioned anything to them?”
“No, of course not. They’d have asked us about it.”
They sat and read the papers and talked and listened to some radio music and then sat together by the fireplace looking at the charcoal embers as the clock struck ten-thirty and eleven and eleven-thirty. They thought of all the other people in the world who had spent their evening, each in their own special way.
“Well,” he said at last. He kissed his wife for a long time.
“We’ve been good for each other, anyway.”
“Do you want to cry?” he asked.
“I don’t think so.”
They went through the house and turned out the lights and locked the doors, and went into the bedroom and stood in the night cool darkness undressing. She took the spread from the bed and folded it carefully over a chair, as always, and pushed back the covers. “The sheets are so cool and clean and nice,” she said.
“I’m tired.”
“We’re both tired.”
They got into bed and lay back.
“Wait a moment,” she said.
He heard her get up and go out into the back of the house, and then he heard the soft shuffling of a swinging door. A moment later she was back. “I left the water running in the kitchen,” she said. “I turned the faucet off.”
Something about this was so funny that he had to laugh. She laughed with him, knowing what it was that she had done that was so funny. They stopped laughing at last and lay in their cool night bed, their hands clasped, their heads together.
“Good night,” he said, after a moment.
“Good night,” she said, adding softly, “dear…”

The Poet: Mary Oliver, "Coming Home"

"Coming Home"

"When we are driving in the dark,
on the long road to Provincetown,
when we are weary,
when the buildings and the scrub pines lose their familiar look,
I imagine us rising from the speeding car.
I imagine us seeing everything from another place -
the top of one of the pale dunes, or the deep and nameless
fields of the sea.
And what we see is a world that cannot cherish us,
but which we cherish.
And what we see is our life moving like that
along the dark edges of everything,
headlights sweeping the blackness,
believing in a thousand fragile and unprovable things.
Looking out for sorrow,
slowing down for happiness,
making all the right turns
right down to the thumping barriers to the sea,
the swirling waves,
the narrow streets, the houses,
the past, the future,
the doorway that belongs
to you and me."

- Mary Oliver

"How It Really Is"

 

Dan, I Allegedly, "The Business Collapse Has Started - Time is Up!"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 3/11/26
"The Business Collapse Has Started - Time is Up!"
"America’s economic warning signs are everywhere and time is up. A massive water shortage in Corpus Christi, Texas could disrupt refinery operations at one of the most important energy ports in the world. Refineries require enormous amounts of water to process gasoline and fuel, and if the drought continues it could impact fuel production, shipping, and global energy markets. Local officials knew about this problem for years and did nothing - and now businesses and consumers may pay the price.

At the same time, major companies are fleeing states with excessive regulation and lawsuits. Exxon is considering leaving New Jersey after 144 years, while companies like Tesla, Oracle, and Hewlett-Packard have already moved to Texas. Meanwhile the auto industry is unraveling: Porsche is taking a $4 billion EV loss, Volkswagen is slashing jobs, and manufacturers like Yamaha are leaving California. From energy shortages to corporate migration and auto industry failures, the economic cracks across America are getting impossible to ignore." 
Comments here:

"A Strategic Dissertation"

"A Strategic Dissertation"
by NO1

"The Greatest President of All Times has spoken. The war is over. He told us himself. Right there on Truth Social. Subliminal messaging at its finest: “There will be no deal with Iran except UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER! After that, and the selection of a GREAT & ACCEPTABLE Leader(s), we, and many of our wonderful and very brave allies and partners, will work tirelessly to bring Iran back from the brink of destruction, making it economically bigger, better, and stronger than ever before. IRAN WILL HAVE A GREAT FUTURE. MAKE IRAN GREAT AGAIN (MIGA!)”

Read it again. UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER - confirmed. Selection of acceptable new leaders - the US will assist. Economic reconstruction - funded. IRAN WILL HAVE A GREAT FUTURE - guaranteed. MIGA. The man announced America’s unconditional surrender on social media and no one seems to have grasped that. Everyone mistakenly took it for a threat.

Which brings me to a classified briefing I received this morning from the NASR Task Force - the Near-term Assessment of Strategic Realities. I implore you not to share this briefing with anyone, especially not with CENTCOM. They have enough on their plate. Apparently the situation has deteriorated to the point where they are crowdsourcing exit strategies from bloggers around the globe. The goal: find Trump an off-ramp, quickly, preferably one that looks like a victory. And that can be captured in 4 words, capitalized.

1. China brokers it: The only party with leverage over both sides simultaneously. Iran’s largest customer. America’s largest creditor. The only ships currently moving through Hormuz are flying the Chinese flag - vessels literally painting “CHINA OWNER & CREW” on their transponders like a maritime hall pass. Chinese reconnaissance satellites are feeding Tehran real-time targeting data on US naval movements. Chinese banks hold $800 billion in US Treasuries. Beijing has a hand in every pocket in this conflict and everyone knows it and nobody says it out loud.

Beijing has been quiet for two weeks. Not meditating. That’s a patience with a very clear endgame. Every day this war continues, China becomes more and more indispensable to everyone involved. When both sides finally want out, there is only one phone number that gets answered on the first ring. China writes the terms, hosts the ceremony, pockets the Middle East. Both sides receive slightly different agreements in different languages. Neither audience reads the other’s copy. Everyone goes home claiming victory.

What China gets in return goes unannounced. It always does. Which is how you know it’s significant. Taiwanese defence commitments quietly adjusted. South Korean THAAD deployment quietly frozen. Pacific naval exercises quietly reduced. None of it announced as concessions. All of it visible in retrospect.

2. The Gulf states do the maths: Bahrain’s Shia majority was cheering Iranian missiles on day four. Kuwait moved its air force planes to a Saudi base rather than park them next to American aircraft. A blast radius calculation, not a logistics preference. Dubai’s billionaire Khalaf Al Habtoor went on camera asking “who gave you the right to drag our region into war with Iran?” Nobody answered.

The Gulf states joined this coalition because they were promised American air defences would protect them. The THAAD fleet is gone. The radar network is permanent scrap because China banned the rare earth materials needed to rebuild it. The promise was protection. The delivery is rubble and a decade-long procurement problem.

The US 5th Fleet is headquartered in a country where a significant portion of the population would prefer it to leave. That is not a sustainable long-term arrangement, and the Bahraini royal family knows it.

At some point one Gulf state formally asks the US to leave. Iran stops shooting at them within hours. It cascades from there. The war becomes logistically impossible without a parking spot. Not a defeat - a landlord dispute. The most expensive eviction in history, caused by the tenant getting the building bombed.

3. Economic gravity: $1.43 billion per day. Of which Congress hasn’t authorized a single dollar. Thirteen force majeures across seven countries. Five years of Tomahawks consumed in three days. South Korea has only a few days of LNG left. Bangladesh rationing fuel at the pump. British Airways cancelling Abu Dhabi flights for the rest of the year. The same voters who elected the Chosen One because eggs cost too much are watching eggs cost more because his war closed the strait that moves the oil that makes the fertilizer that grows the corn that feeds the chicken.

It’s a supply chain. Everything connects to everything. Except the exit strategy, which appears to be disconnected from reality entirely. The war ends not with a ceasefire but with a margin call. Iran doesn’t need to win the military engagement. It just needs Washington’s credit card to decline. Forty-five years of sanctions built a pain tolerance the Pentagon simply cannot match - it’s infrastructure at this point, baked into how the country functions.

4. OPEC+ declares war on the war: Every producer ceases exports until hostilities end. “You want $200 oil? Keep shooting. You want $80? Stop”. Iran gets a seat at the table as a fellow producer, not a defeated enemy. You don’t surrender to your cartel colleagues - you negotiate quotas. MBS chairs the talks, wearing a thobe and a smirk, having recently discovered that the American defence umbrella is more of a parasol. In a hurricane. With holes. Washington gets invited to observe. Behind a rope. At its own client state’s table.

5. The quiet drawdown: A back-channel arrangement - Oman, probably, they’ve been doing this thankless job for decades and the FM was describing a diplomatic breakthrough less than 48 hours before the first bomb fell - produces some nominal Iranian commitment on enrichment that Iran was going to make anyway. Because Fordow is empty. The enriched uranium moved before June. JD Vance acknowledged it. Rafael Grossi said it publicly. The casus belli was destroyed before the war started, which is fine, because the casus belli was never really the point.

Trump posts: “IRAN HAS SURRENDERED. TOTAL AND COMPLETE VICTORY”. Iran’s parliament speaker: “We were never fighting them seriously”. Two different agreements in two different languages for two different audiences who will never compare notes. The quiet part is the substance. The loud part is Truth Social. Both are real. Neither is the full story.

6. Unconditional surrender: Hormuz stays closed. Oil hits $200. The S&P craters. Three Gulf states expel US forces. South Korea and Japan join the Chinese safe-passage system because days of LNG reserves tends to clarify your geopolitical priorities.

The Great Pumpkin goes on Truth Social. "TREMENDOUS DEAL WITH IRAN. THE BEST DEAL EVER MADE. MAYBE THE BEST DEAL IN HISTORY. Iran has agreed to STOP SHOOTING (they were running out anyway!) in exchange for some VERY SMALL concessions that FAKE NEWS will exaggerate. Sanctions? We didn’t need them. Never worked. I always said that. Hormuz? OPEN. Oil? FLOWING. I personally negotiated with the NEW leader of Iran (very smart man, great genes, reminds me of myself honestly) and he agreed that AMERICA IS GREAT. That’s all I needed to hear. MISSION ACCOMPLISHED. MIGA!”

The “very small concessions”: full sanctions relief, withdrawal from all Gulf bases, nuclear programe recognized, $400 billion reconstruction, formal apology, Palestinian statehood. Everything on Iran’s list. Plus two items Iran hadn’t even asked for, because the negotiating team accidentally conceded them while trying to find the bathroom in the Iranian foreign ministry.

Fox runs “The Art of the Deal: How Trump Outsmarted Iran”. Hannity uses the word “masterful” eleven times in four minutes. A new personal best. Araghchi posts: “We accept America’s unconditional surrender”. Nobody’s sure if he’s joking. Including Araghchi.

7. Israel ceases to exist: Not in a mushroom cloud. In an actuarial table. Hezbollah takes the north. The settlements that evacuated in 2024, again in 2025, don’t come back a third time. Fool me three times and I’m moving to Berlin. Palestine gets recognised by Europe. Recognition cascades. A single-state solution arrives not through negotiation but through the collapse of the entity that kept refusing it. Israel doesn’t end with a bang. It ends when the young leave, the old die. The operation to prevent Iran from threatening Israel’s existence ends by threatening Israel’s existence. Karma, it turns out, carries a big stick.

8. The Gulf monarchies fall: Bahrain first. Saudi Arabia next - not a revolution, a palace call. MBS tells the White House he’ll be pricing in renminbi from now on. The petrodollar doesn’t die in a confrontation. It dies on hold with Beijing. The regime change is happening. Just not in the country they planned it for.

9. America wins unconditionally - the discombobulator: Would be intellectually dishonest not to include this. It requires: actual air superiority (not the version where they’re too scared to enter the airspace they claim to control), destroying air defenses that are still operational, finding underground missile cities built inside mountains, and neutralizing an army of about half a million, across terrain that makes Afghanistan look like a putting green, against 90 million people whose national hobby is not surrendering and whose CV includes repelling invaders continuously since Alexander the Great.

Then regime change that sticks. In a country that just unified around a martyred Supreme Leader and a replacement chosen over Zoom because the last meeting room had a sudden case of cruise missile. The backup candidate is Reza Pahlavi. 45 years in Maryland. He is to Iranian leadership what a museum sword is to warfare.

Then you hold it. Iraq had 26 million people. America brought 200,000 troops. Stayed twenty years. Two trillion dollars. Still thinking about what it achieved. I’m sure everything will be fine.

10. Bay of Bandar Abbas: The Marines go in. Last country to invade Iran: Iraq, 1980. Eight years war. A million dead. Iraq shares a border. America’s supply chain runs through the very strait it’s invading through. That’s like robbing a bank through the vault door while the vault door is on fire and the bank is shooting at you and you parked in a tow-away zone. There are midterms in November. Yep, everything will work out fine.

11. The War of 1812 ending: Both sides just... stop. No treaty. No terms. The missiles thin out. The carriers drift away like teenagers leaving a party that peaked two hours ago. Historians argue about who won. They never stop. The Wikipedia page gets locked for “persistent edit wars”. Normal filed for bankruptcy three strait closures ago.

12. Both sides run out of real things to hit USrael bombed every painting of an airplane in the Middle East. CENTCOM’s highlight reel is a PowerPoint of flaming plywood. The war degenerates into competitive art destruction. Iran expands targeting doctrine. A traffic light in Bahrain that once directed a convoy. A weather station in Qatar because technically weather data aids military operations - and technically so does oxygen, but they’re saving that for week four. CENTCOM retaliates with a library containing books about missile physics. Also cookbooks. The cookbooks are collateral. The Venice Biennale awards both sides the Golden Lion. A gallery in Basel offers to represent both. Commission: 15%.

13. The paperwork kills it: A federal judge in Delaware orders an environmental impact assessment for every cruise missile. 4,000 filings. Public comment period: thirty days each. Ninety-nine percent submitted by bots, one percent by one retired schoolteacher in Ohio writing STOP THE WAR in increasingly creative fonts. By week three she is doing calligraphy. The court formally acknowledges her dedication.

Iran files an amicus brief. 600 pages. Farsi footnotes. Cites the Quran, the Geneva Conventions, and a 2019 Trump tweet that directly contradicts the government’s legal position. The government argues it was sarcasm. The court requests original context. The original context is a toilet selfie. The government withdraws the argument. The war enters discovery. In 2043, a paralegal finds the injunction misfiled under “miscellaneous”. The war is declared over. Both sides appeal.

14. Force majeure on the war itself: CENTCOM declares it. “Due to circumstances beyond our control - specifically, the enemy fighting back - we are unable to fulfill our contractual obligation to achieve victory at this time. Delivery of regime change has been postponed to Q4 2027”. Iran counterclaims. Arbitrators award $4.7 trillion in lost oil revenue, payable in physical gold, delivered to Tehran. COMEX declares force majeure.

15. The Very Stable Genius buys Iran: He tried Greenland. He tried the Panama Canal. He looked at Canada in a way that made Canada uncomfortable. The man has a type.

Iran counter-offers: $2 trillion, Hormuz access rights, physical gold delivered to Tehran. The Dealmaker haggles. “One trillion. Final offer”. Iran says two. He says one point five. Iran says two. He says “DEAL!” before anyone explains he just agreed to two. Jared nods. Jared always nods. COMEX declares force majeure. Again.

16. Paula White negotiates the peace: “Hamandah, Akka, Ataraka, Tedda... I DECLARE this war OVER in the NAME of JESUS! Angels are being dispatched from Africa RIGHT NOW! ANGELIC REINFORCEMENT!” The ceasefire is signed three hours later because both delegations would rather end a war than sit through another session. Hormuz reopens. The angels return to Africa. Paula White gets a Netflix special. Horror in Iran. Comedy everywhere else. Emmy winner. She thanks the angels.

The Great One posts: “PEACE ACHIEVED THROUGH FAITH. MIGA!” Markets rally eight percent. Every version ends in the same world. Radar network gone and irreplaceable. Gulf security architecture permanently reconfigured. China holding Hormuz by consent. The petrodollar dying. The real question was never how the war ends. Trump already told us. Unconditional surrender. Iran great again. He just got the direction wrong."

Bill Bonner, "Out of Whack"

Oliver Cromwell at the Battle of Dunbar, 
during the Third English Civil War
"Out of Whack"
by Bill Bonner

“All of the people that died through the roadside bombs.
Died and are right now walking around with no legs.”
- Donald Trump

Youghal, Ireland - "Let us take another look at the hypothesis at the center of our big picture outlook: the big men of history may have a conscious plan and purpose...but many also have an historical role that is much more important. It came to mind as we read this headline from Harici: "Economists Richard Wolff and Michael Hudson considered the US military intervention in Iran as a desperate geopolitical move that tried to slow the fall of the empire."

Like us, they look at US policy decisions in the light of a failing empire. No longer flexible and dynamic, a geriatric empire seeks ways to protect itself...to hold on to what it’s got...and to keep its status and its wealth as long as possible. And with such a large arsenal at hand, it begins to ask: is there any annoyance that can’t be eliminated by whacking someone?

Don’t like a foreign nation’s emigration policies? Whack it with tariffs. Don’t like the way they deal with the drug cartels? Whack it with sanctions. Don’t like the way they refuse to surrender their national sovereignty? Whack them with bombs and missiles.

But these efforts do not ‘slow the fall of empire.’ They speed it up. All of this whacking makes enemies and costs money. Fortune: "‘This cannot be sustainable’: The US borrowed $50 billion a week for the past five months, the CBO says."

And by shifting the economy to whacking...rather than producing things people want and need...real, useful output goes down. And then, the empire economy is soon ‘out of whack’ altogether, as inflation, debt and monetary crises undermine real economic activity and weaken the empire’s ability to defend itself. The Supreme Leader may well imagine that he is Making America Great Again. And maybe he is, but he might also be a dupe of History...whose actual role is very different.

Oliver Cromwell, in 17th century England, was a competent cavalry officer. He led the Protestant roundheads in their battles with the Royalist cavaliers. And it was he who signed the order by which Charles I was beheaded. Cromwell thought he was doing God’s work. His conscious goal may have been to rid England of Royalists. But he was seduced by power and began to act like royalty himself. Others began to address him as “Your Highness.” And as Lord Protector, he was paid a salary that even Trump might envy - about $20 million in today’s terms.

The English were appalled by his cruelty...and shaken by the chaos and disorder that he caused. He inadvertently laid the foundation for the return of King Charles II and the establishment of England’s constitutional monarchy. In 1658, Cromwell died of natural causes. But the Thames’ was already flowing with new water. In 1659, Cromwell’s body was dug up and beheaded.

Napoleon Bonaparte, similarly talented at war...and similarly at the service of a new Republican government, whupped the Austrians...the Spanish...the Prussians – even the Egyptians. And then, enchanted by his own genius and enthrall to his own audacity, he decided to take on Russia.

And here it is worth remembering one of the grand masters of military strategy, a man who figured out how to win wars by not fighting battles. In 1812, Barclay de Tolly, a Baltic German, was in command of the Tsar’s largest army. Instead of meeting Bonaparte in battle, he chose to retreat. He scorched the earth in front of the Grande Armee and drew it deeper and deeper into Russian territory. By the time Napoleon realized the fix he was in, it was too late. Russia was easy to get into; it would prove disastrously difficult to get out. He lost around 300,000 of his soldiers - to cold, hunger, disease, and Russian armies.

Whatever Napoleon thought he was doing, his historical role was to return the French aristocracy to power, while he battled rats on St. Helena island. Instead of founding a new Europe based on military victories, his defeat began a long period of unprecedented peace and prosperity.

There are many other examples. Woodrow Wilson grandly claimed to be making the world ‘safe for democracy.’ But largely as a consequence of his meddling, the world became much less safe and much less democratic. Russia, Germany and Italy all turned to Big Man rule….and war.

And now, Donald Trump may believe he is trying to get a better deal for himself and his fellow Americans. Or maybe not. But, if he is able to complete his term, his historical role, we believe, will be to bring US imperial power down to more modest levels."

"The Battle For The Persian Gulf And The Strait Of Hormuz Has Only Just Begun, And There Are Signs That Iran Is Preparing To Deploy Large Numbers Of Naval Mines"

"The Battle For The Persian Gulf And The Strait Of Hormuz
 Has Only Just Begun, And There Are Signs That Iran Is 
Preparing To Deploy Large Numbers Of Naval Mines"
by Michael Snyder

"If Iran actually starts deploying naval mines in the Strait of Hormuz, we are going to see a gigantic wave of panic sweep through global financial markets. At this moment, any commercial vessels that attempt to pass through the Strait of Hormuz are sitting ducks for Iranian drones and missiles. That is why traffic through the Strait has essentially been paralyzed, and this has created the largest oil supply disruption in human history. Yes, a few ships are still getting through, but if the Iranians deploy thousands of highly sophisticated naval mines the entire Persian Gulf will be on lockdown for the foreseeable future. If you wanted to create an unprecedented global crisis, that would be a great way to do it.

According to CBS News, U.S. intelligence officials have disclosed that they have “begun seeing indications that Iran may be preparing to deploy naval mines in the Strait of Hormuz”…"U.S. intelligence has begun seeing indications that Iran may be preparing to deploy naval mines in the Strait of Hormuz, CBS News reported Tuesday in a post on X. The report comes as the United States warns that shipping through the strategic waterway has been disrupted during the war with Iran."

Apparently these mines would be deployed by very small vessels, and we are being told that Iran has a very large stockpile… "U.S. intelligence assets have begun to see indications Iran is taking steps to deploy mines in Strait of Hormuz shipping lane. Iran is using smaller crafts that can carry 2 to 3 mines each. While Iran’s mine stock isn’t publicly known, estimates over the years have ranged from roughly 2,000 to 6,000 naval mines of Iranian, Chinese and Russian-made variants, @JimLaPorta reports."

Let’s hope that Iran chooses not to do this, because it would represent a massive escalation. Alarmingly, the IRGC is declaring that it will not allow any oil to pass through the Strait of Hormuz at all if the U.S. and Israel continue their attacks…"Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps said it would not allow any oil to leave the region if attacks from the United States and Israel continue. ‘We are the ones who will determine the end of the war,’ a spokesperson said, describing Trump’s comments as ‘nonsense’, according to state media."

In response, President Trump is threatening to hit Iran twenty times harder than they have been hit so far… “If Iran does anything that stops the flow of Oil within the Strait of Hormuz, they will be hit by the United States of America TWENTY TIMES HARDER than they have been hit thus far,” Trump warned. “Additionally, we will take out easily destroyable targets that will make it virtually impossible for Iran to ever be built back, as a Nation, again - Death, Fire, and Fury will reign upon them - But I hope, and pray, that it does not happen! This is a gift from the United States of America to China, and all of those Nations that heavily use the Hormuz Strait. Hopefully, it is a gesture that will be greatly appreciated,” he added."

We have reached another major tipping point. It will be fascinating to see what happens next.

On Tuesday, U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright claimed that the U.S. Navy had escorted an oil tanker through the Strait of Hormuz, and that sent oil prices plummeting. But it has since turned out that his tweet was not accurate at all…"White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said the U.S. has not yet escorted any oil tankers through the Strait of Hormuz, contrary to a since-deleted tweet from Energy Secretary Chris Wright. But, the U.S. Navy stands ready to do so if necessary, she said.

“I was made aware of this post,” Leavitt said during her press briefing. “I haven’t had a chance to talk to the energy secretary about it directly. However, I know the post was taken down pretty quickly, and I can confirm that the U.S. Navy has not escorted a tanker or a vessel at this time, though of course that’s an option the president has said he will absolutely utilize if and when necessary at the appropriate time.”

Any U.S. warships that attempt to go through the Strait of Hormuz would be sitting ducks. The Strait of Hormuz is very thin, so there would be nowhere to run and nowhere to hide. And right now the Iranians still have full control over that absolutely vital waterway.

Meanwhile, the Iranians continue to target energy infrastructure all over the region. On Tuesday, an attack by Iranian drones shut down the largest oil refinery in the Middle East…"Iranian drones struck Ruwais oil refinery, causing a fire and forcing its closure as a ‘precaution’ on Tuesday. The facility, the largest in the Middle East, can process 922,000 barrels a day and acts as a hub for the country’s chemical, fertilizer and industrial gas plants. ‘The Ruwais refinery has halted operations out of precaution,’ a source said."

Of course the U.S. and Israel have been hitting energy infrastructure as well, and this has created quite an environmental mess. It has been widely reported that black rain has been falling in Tehran, and the WHO is warning that this black rain could have very serious health consequences…"The World Health Organization warned on Tuesday that the “black rain” and toxic compounds in the air in Iran after strikes on oil facilities could cause respiratory problems, and it backed Iran’s advisory urging people to remain indoors.

The U.N. health agency, which has an office in Iran and works with authorities on health emergencies, said it has received multiple reports of oil-laden rain this week. Tehran was choked in black smoke on Monday after an oil refinery was hit, in an escalation in strikes on Iran’s domestic energy supplies as part of the U.S.-Israeli campaign.

“The black rain and the acidic rain coming with it is indeed a danger for the population, respiratory mainly,” WHO spokesperson Christian Lindmeier told a press briefing in Geneva, adding that Iran had advised people to stay indoors."

Even if the war ended tomorrow, the damage that has been done to energy infrastructure in the Middle East would take many months to repair. I don’t think that the financial markets have fully taken this into account yet. Sadly, it is unlikely that the war will end any time soon. In fact, there is lots of talk in Washington that President Trump may soon send U.S. troops to take control of Kharg Island…"An island one-third the size of Manhattan controls virtually all Iranian crude oil exports - and experts say its fate could be essential to President Trump’s endgame with Tehran.

Kharg Island is located about 16 miles off the Iranian coast in the Persian Gulf, making it difficult to defend and easier to isolate - reportedly drawing the attention of administration planners. “Kharg Island handles roughly 90% of Iran’s crude oil exports. Take it out, and this means cutting off the military budget in addition to pulling the plug on the basic services that keep Iranian society functioning,” said Mohammed Soliman, a senior fellow at the DC-based Middle East Institute."

Seizing Kharg Island would reduce Iran’s oil exports by about 90 percent, and that would cripple the regime’s ability to keep operating. But it would also be an enormous escalation, because now U.S. ground troops would be directly involved. We have entered such a dangerous time. I fully expect that we will witness some absolutely breathtaking escalations in the days ahead, and I don’t think that the world is ready for what is coming next."

"How Iran Can Cripple the West in One Move"

Full screen recommended.
Prof. Jiang Xueqin, 3/11/26
"How Iran Can Cripple the West in One Move"
"What if the most powerful weapon in a war isn’t missiles… but geography? In this analysis by Jiang Xueqin, we explore how one narrow corridor in the Middle East could influence the entire global economy. At the center of the story is the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow passage connecting the Persian Gulf to the global shipping network. A massive share of the world’s oil passes through this chokepoint every day, supplying major economies such as India, China, Japan, and South Korea. This video examines a powerful geopolitical question: What happens if that corridor is disrupted? This is not simply a regional conflict. It’s a look at how energy routes, global finance, trade networks, and geopolitics intersect at one of the most critical chokepoints on Earth. Because sometimes the real story of war isn’t about the weapons - it’s about the map."
Comments here:

"World War III and the Collapse of American 'Shock and Awe'"

Full screen recommended.
Prof. Jiang Xueqin, 3/11/26
"World War III and the Collapse of American 'Shock and Awe'"
Comments here:

Adventures With Danno, "Shocking Prices at Dollar General!"

Full screen recommended.
Adventures With Danno, 3/11/26
"Shocking Prices at Dollar General!"
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o
Meanwhile, elsewhere...
Full screen recommended.
Travelling With Russell, 3/11/26
"I Found the Newest Discount Supermarket in Russia"
"What does a brand new Russian Supermarket look like inside? Join me as I discover the newest supermarket in Russia. Located in the Moscow Region, 40km from the centre of Moscow. Da! Supermarket is a Russian-owned supermarket chain."
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Tuesday, March 10, 2026

"Choke Point: The Global Economic Consequences of The Persian Gulf Shutdown"

"Choke Point: The Global Economic 
Consequences of The Persian Gulf Shutdown"
by Larry C. Johnson

"The Persian Gulf is the most consequential body of water in the global economy. Its narrow exit - the Strait of Hormuz, just 33 kilometres wide at its narrowest point - acts as a valve through which flows an extraordinary share of the world’s energy and agricultural inputs. A sustained closure of that valve by Iran will trigger an economic shock with few historical precedents.

Let’s look at the three commodity categories most exposed to such a disruption: crude oil and refined petroleum products, liquefied natural gas (LNG), and urea, the nitrogen fertiliser upon which modern agriculture depends. Together, these three flows underpin not just energy markets but global food security, industrial production, and the fiscal stability of dozens of nations.

The Strait of Hormuz: A Single Point of Failure: Roughly 20–21 million barrels of oil pass through the Strait of Hormuz every day, representing approximately 20% of global petroleum liquids consumption and around 30% of seaborne crude trade. The Gulf states bordering this corridor - Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Iraq, Iran, and Qatar - collectively hold the majority of the world’s proven oil reserves and a dominant share of global LNG export capacity.

There is no adequate alternative. The East-West Pipeline across Saudi Arabia (Petroline) can carry around 5 million barrels per day, and the Habshan-Fujairah pipeline in the UAE adds limited bypass capacity. But these routes are insufficient to compensate for a full shutdown, and are themselves vulnerable to sabotage. For the first time in history the oil has stopped flowing.

Oil: The Immediate Shock: The abrupt closure of Persian Gulf oil exports will constitute the largest supply shock in the history of petroleum markets - larger in absolute terms than the 1973 Arab oil embargo or the Iranian Revolution of 1979, both of which removed far smaller volumes, if Iran maintains the blockade for a month or longer. The International Energy Agency estimates that OECD strategic reserves could theoretically cushion a disruption for several months, but the psychological and speculative impact on oil prices would be immediate and severe.

Analysts and historical precedent suggest that oil prices could spike to anywhere between $150 and $250 per barrel - or potentially higher if markets judged the disruption likely to be prolonged. At such prices, the consequences would radiate rapidly through the global economy:

Fuel costs and consumer prices. Petrol, diesel, aviation fuel, and heating oil prices have all surged. In major consuming economies - the United States, Europe, China, Japan, India -  consumer price inflation will accelerate sharply with a prolonged disruption. Households will face dramatically higher energy bills and transport costs within weeks.

Industrial contraction. Energy-intensive manufacturing sectors - petrochemicals, cement, steel, aluminium, glass - will face crippling input cost increases. Many would reduce output or shut down. Supply chains across the global economy would seize as freight costs soared.

Aviation and shipping. Aviation fuel costs would make large swaths of commercial aviation economically unviable. Shipping freight rates, already elevated by fuel costs, would compound broader supply chain disruption.

Recession risk. Every major oil price shock since the 1970s has been followed by a global economic recession. A shock of this magnitude would almost certainly do the same. The IMF and World Bank have historically estimated that a $10 per barrel sustained rise in oil prices reduces global GDP growth by around 0.2–0.5 percentage points; a shock ten or twenty times larger would be categorically different in nature. Here are the most vulnerable countries to this shock:

Japan: Japan is the world’s most structurally vulnerable major economy to a Gulf oil shock. It imports approximately 90% of its crude oil from the Middle East, with Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Kuwait, and Qatar as its dominant suppliers. Japan has almost no domestic oil production, very limited alternative import infrastructure, and a dense industrial base dependent on petroleum. Its strategic reserves - among the largest in the world at around 150 days of consumption - provide a buffer, but not immunity. A prolonged closure lasting more than six months would force severe rationing, industrial curtailment, and recession. Japan’s post-Fukushima decision to phase down nuclear power has deepened its vulnerability by reducing the one energy source that could partly substitute.

South Korea: South Korea imports over 70% of its crude from the Middle East, with the Gulf states as its largest suppliers. Like Japan, it has negligible domestic production. Its economy is heavily industrial - semiconductors, shipbuilding, petrochemicals, and steel - all energy-intensive sectors that would face rapid input cost crises. South Korea maintains strategic reserves of approximately 100 days. Its proximity to Japan means both nations would compete for limited alternative supply from West Africa, North America, and Russia, driving prices higher still.

India: India is the world’s third-largest oil importer and sources roughly 60–65% of its crude from the Gulf region, primarily Iraq, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE. It has limited domestic production and strategic reserves of only around 10–15 days - among the smallest relative to import volume of any major economy. India’s fuel subsidy architecture means the government would face enormous fiscal pressure as global oil prices surged, at the same moment that import costs were consuming foreign exchange reserves. For India’s 1.4 billion population - many of whom have limited financial buffers - the pass-through of energy and food cost increases would be devastating. India’s industrial heartland, its agricultural sector (which depends heavily on diesel for irrigation pumps), and its nascent manufacturing base would all be severely disrupted.

Taiwan: Taiwan imports almost all of its energy requirements and sources a significant majority of its oil from the Gulf. As the world’s primary producer of advanced semiconductors, a disruption to Taiwan’s energy supply would carry consequences far beyond its own economy - threatening global technology supply chains. Taiwan’s strategic reserves are modest, and alternative supply routes would be expensive and slow to establish.

Pakistan and Bangladesh: Both nations are heavily dependent on Gulf oil imports and have almost no strategic reserves, limited foreign exchange, and large populations with high fuel and food price sensitivity. Pakistan in particular has endured recurring foreign exchange crises; a surge in import costs would likely trigger a balance-of-payments collapse. For Bangladesh, fuel price increases would threaten the cost competitiveness of its garment sector - the backbone of its export economy - as well as the diesel-powered irrigation that supports its rice production.

Sub-Saharan Africa (Particularly Kenya, Ethiopia, Tanzania): Many sub-Saharan African nations depend on Gulf oil for a large majority of their refined product imports, with minimal domestic refining capacity and no strategic stockpiles. Countries like Kenya, Ethiopia, and Tanzania would face acute fuel shortages, with knock-on effects on transport, electricity generation, and agricultural supply chains. Governments with limited foreign reserves would be unable to sustain imports at elevated prices for any prolonged period.
LNG: The Gas Markets Upended: Qatar is by some measures the world’s largest single exporter of liquefied natural gas, accounting for roughly 20–22% of global LNG trade. Together with the UAE and other Gulf producers, the Persian Gulf region represents a pillar of the global gas supply architecture. The disruption of this supply arrives into a global gas market already structurally tighter following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the reconfiguration of European energy supply.

Japan (Again the Most Exposed): Japan is also the world’s largest or second-largest LNG importer, sourcing a dominant share from Qatar and other Gulf producers. LNG powers roughly a third of Japan’s electricity generation following its post-Fukushima nuclear drawdown. A loss of Gulf LNG would immediately threaten grid stability, with cascading effects across manufacturing, services, and residential supply. Japan has limited LNG storage capacity and no pipeline gas import option. The combined loss of Gulf oil and Gulf LNG would place Japan under extraordinary simultaneous pressure on two of its three primary energy sources.

South Korea: South Korea is consistently among the top three LNG importers globally, with Qatar one of its largest suppliers. Gas fires a substantial share of South Korea’s power generation. Like Japan, it has no pipeline import option and limited domestic gas production, making seaborne LNG the only supply mechanism. Power shortages would ripple through its semiconductor fabs and shipyards - both globally critical industries.

European Union - Particularly Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium, and France: European nations pivoted heavily toward LNG imports after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine severed their pipeline gas relationships. Qatar has emerged as one of Europe’s most important LNG suppliers. Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium, and France have all invested in LNG import terminals and contracted long-term Gulf supply. A Gulf LNG disruption would arrive into a European gas market with reduced pipeline alternatives from Russia, creating acute supply shortfalls particularly in winter months. Germany - Europe’s largest economy and its industrial engine - would face the most severe manufacturing impact, given its gas-intensive chemical, glass, and steel industries.

China: China has surpassed Japan as the world’s largest LNG importer in recent years. It sources a significant share of its LNG from Qatar and other Gulf exporters. However, China has a partial mitigant unavailable to most others: significant pipeline gas imports from Russia and Central Asia, which could be ramped up to partly offset Gulf LNG losses. This makes China more resilient than Japan or South Korea, but still substantially exposed, particularly for provinces distant from pipeline infrastructure where LNG-fired power dominates.

Pakistan: Pakistan has become deeply reliant on LNG imports to fuel its power sector following the depletion of domestic gas reserves. It sources the overwhelming majority of its LNG from Gulf producers. Power cuts - already a chronic problem - would become catastrophic. Industrial output, water pumping, and basic services would all be impaired. Pakistan’s fiscal position is too fragile to sustain premium spot LNG purchases on global markets for any extended period.

Urea: The Overlooked Catastrophe: Of the three commodity shocks, the disruption of urea exports from the Persian Gulf may be the least immediately visible - but could prove the most enduring in its consequences. Urea is the world’s most widely used nitrogen fertilizer. It is synthesised from natural gas via the Haber-Bosch process, and the Gulf states - particularly Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the UAE, and Oman - are among the world’s largest producers and exporters, collectively accounting for a significant share of global urea trade.

The dependency of modern agriculture on synthetic nitrogen fertilizer is difficult to overstate. It is estimated that roughly half of the nitrogen in the human body today passed through the Haber-Bosch process at some point - meaning that artificial fertilizer now sustains approximately half of the world’s population. A collapse in urea supply would threaten crop yields on a global scale.

Crop yield decline. Without adequate nitrogen fertiliser, yields of staple crops - wheat, rice, maize, soy - would fall dramatically within one to two growing seasons. The effect would not be uniform: wealthy agricultural nations with domestic fertiliser capacity or large stockpiles (the United States, Canada, parts of Europe) would be more insulated. The developing world, particularly sub-Saharan Africa and South and Southeast Asia, would face acute shortages.

Food price inflation. Global food prices, already elevated by conflict-related supply disruptions in recent years, would surge further. The Food and Agriculture Organisation’s food price index would likely break historical records. Bread, rice, and staple grain prices would become unaffordable for hundreds of millions of people.

Geopolitical instability. Historical evidence linking sharp food price spikes to political instability is robust. The Arab Spring of 2011 coincided with a period of record food prices. A global urea shortage and its downstream consequences for food security would heighten the risk of civil unrest, state fragility, and humanitarian crisis across numerous countries.

India: India is the world’s largest urea importer by volume, consuming enormous quantities to support its vast agricultural sector. Despite significant domestic urea production, India’s demand consistently outpaces supply, making it heavily reliant on Gulf imports, primarily from Oman, UAE, and Saudi Arabia. A supply cut would threaten yields of wheat, rice, and pulses across millions of smallholder farms. Given that Indian agriculture supports the livelihoods of roughly half the population, the social and political consequences of a fertiliser shortage would be profound. Food inflation would accelerate sharply and could threaten political stability.

Brazil: Brazil is among the world’s top urea importers, having dramatically expanded its agricultural output - it is now the world’s largest soy and beef exporter, and a major corn and sugar producer. Brazil produces almost no urea domestically at scale and imports a very large share from Gulf producers, particularly from the UAE and Qatar. A urea supply disruption would threaten Brazilian agricultural yields across the Cerrado and Amazon frontier regions, affecting both domestic food supply and Brazil’s critical role as a global food exporter. The consequences would ripple through global commodity markets.

Australia: Australia is one of the world’s most import-dependent nations for urea, sourcing the overwhelming majority from Gulf producers - particularly Qatar and the UAE. It has virtually no domestic urea production capacity. Australian wheat farmers, who produce a globally significant crop, apply large quantities of nitrogen fertilizer; a supply cut would reduce yields and threaten Australia’s agricultural export revenues. Australia is also the world’s largest diesel exhaust fluid (AdBlue) consumer relative to its size, as this urea-derived product is required by most modern diesel vehicles and engines - a secondary vulnerability that became apparent during a 2021 supply shock.

Sub-Saharan Africa (Ethiopia, Tanzania, Mozambique, Nigeria): Sub-Saharan African nations with significant smallholder agricultural sectors are acutely exposed to urea supply disruption. Most have no domestic production and rely heavily on Gulf imports, often through the Indian Ocean trade routes. Fertiliser usage rates in Africa are already among the world’s lowest — meaning yields are already suboptimal - but further supply cuts and price increases would price smallholder farmers out of the market entirely. In Ethiopia, Tanzania, Mozambique, and parts of Nigeria, this would translate directly into food production shortfalls, price spikes, and heightened hunger. The World Food Program has repeatedly identified fertilizer availability as a critical determinant of food security across the region.

Southeast Asia — Vietnam, Thailand, Philippines: Southeast Asian rice-producing nations - Vietnam, Thailand, and the Philippines - rely heavily on imported urea to sustain their paddy yields. These countries are among the world’s largest rice exporters and form a critical buffer for global food markets. A collapse in their urea supply would reduce rice output, sending prices higher across Asia and the Middle East, where rice is a dietary staple for billions.

Urea Exposure: Country Risk Summary:
The Compounding Effect: Several countries face acute exposure across all three commodity categories simultaneously. These nations represent the most extreme cases of vulnerability.

Japan: The Triple Threat: Japan is uniquely exposed on all three fronts: it is the world’s most Gulf-dependent major oil importer, one of the world’s largest LNG importers with no pipeline alternative, and a significant importer of Gulf urea for its rice and vegetable agriculture. A full Persian Gulf shutdown would represent an existential economic crisis for Japan, requiring emergency rationing, international assistance, and an accelerated nuclear restart program. Japan’s government has long identified Gulf security as a core strategic interest - and for good reason.

India: Scale Makes It Uniquely Dangerous: India faces critical exposure on oil and urea, and significant exposure on LNG. What makes India’s situation particularly alarming is scale: with 1.4 billion people, a fuel subsidy system that creates enormous fiscal pressure when prices rise, minimal strategic reserves, and a large poor population with little financial resilience, the social consequences of a simultaneous oil and fertilizer shock would be catastrophic. India would face simultaneous fuel inflation, agricultural input collapse, food price spikes, and foreign exchange depletion. The political stability implications would extend well beyond India’s borders.

Pakistan: The Fragile State Scenario: Pakistan faces severe exposure on oil and LNG, and significant exposure on urea. Critically, Pakistan begins any crisis from a position of chronic fiscal and foreign exchange weakness. A Gulf shutdown would rapidly exhaust its ability to finance import bills, potentially triggering sovereign default, currency collapse, and widespread civil unrest. Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal makes its potential destabilisation a matter of global security concern, not merely an economic one.

South Korea and Taiwan: Industrial Economies at Risk: Both nations face extreme oil and LNG exposure, and their economies are globally systemically important in ways that extend their vulnerability internationally. South Korea’s steel, chemicals, and shipbuilding, and Taiwan’s semiconductor fabs, supply global industries. Their disruption would cascade through global manufacturing and technology supply chains in ways that a comparable shock to a less industrially specialized economy would not.

Which Countries Are Most Insulated? Not all nations face equal exposure. Several are significantly better positioned to withstand a Gulf shutdown, either because they produce their own energy, have diversified supply, or hold large strategic reserves.

United States. The US has achieved near-energy-independence through its shale oil and gas revolution. It is a net oil exporter and the world’s largest LNG exporter. It produces large quantities of domestic urea. A Gulf shutdown would raise global prices and affect US consumers, but the supply shock would not directly threaten US energy security. The US is best placed of all major economies.

Canada. Canada is a major oil sands and pipeline gas producer, self-sufficient in energy and a significant fertiliser exporter. Its exposure to a Gulf shutdown is primarily through global price effects rather than supply disruption.

Russia. Russia produces large volumes of oil, gas, and urea, and will likely benefit economically from a Gulf shutdown through higher global prices for its exports. Its energy self-sufficiency is near-total.

Norway. A major oil and gas producer with minimal Gulf dependency. Norway would benefit from higher global energy prices.

Brazil (energy). Brazil’s deep-water oil production makes it largely self-sufficient in crude oil. Its LNG exposure is limited. Its vulnerability is concentrated in urea, where it is critically dependent (as described above).

Historical Context and Strategic Reserves: The 1973 oil embargo - which removed roughly 4 million barrels per day from global markets - caused a fourfold increase in oil prices and contributed to severe recessions across the industrialized world. The current potential disruption would be five times larger in volume terms. The 1979 Iranian Revolution removed approximately 4–5 million barrels per day temporarily; the Iran-Iraq War’s tanker attacks in the 1980s rattled markets without fully closing the Strait. No historical episode provides a true precedent for a complete, sustained Gulf shutdown.

Strategic petroleum reserves maintained by IEA member nations - totalling around 1.2–1.5 billion barrels - could theoretically replace several months of lost Gulf supply if fully released. In practice, coordinated release at the required scale has never been attempted, and the logistical, political, and market-calming challenges would be formidable. Strategic gas and fertiliser reserves are far more limited and will be exhausted much faster.

Conclusion: The Persian Gulf is not merely an important trade route - it is a structural dependency baked into the global economy over seven decades. The simultaneous disruption of oil, LNG, and urea flows from the region constitute a polycrisis of exceptional severity: an energy shock, an industrial shock, and a food security crisis arriving together, reinforcing one another, and challenging the capacity of governments, international institutions, and markets to respond.

Decades of optimisation around cost efficiency - concentrating energy production, fertiliser manufacture, and shipping in the most economical locations - has created a system that is efficient in stable conditions but catastrophically fragile under stress. If Iran is able to sustain the closure of the Strait of Hormuz for a month or more, it will enjoy significant leverage in negotiations to end the blockaded."

"Iran Winning, Israel Under Heavy Missile Fire, Trump's Ceasefire Rejected"

Full screen recommended.
Danny Haiphong, 3/10/26
"Iran Winning, Israel Under Heavy Missile Fire, 
Trump's Ceasefire Rejected"
"Iran has rejected Trump's attempts at starting ceasefire talks and has instituted a game changing missile strategy against Israel which is only placing more pressure on the entire global economy to demand an end to the war. Danny Haiphong analyzes the latest developments in the war as Israel and the US finds itself on the ropes of defeat."
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"War Hawks Telling Lies To Keep The Equity Markets Flying High"

Strong language alert!
Gerald Celente, 3/10/26
"War Hawks Telling Lies To Keep 
The Equity Markets Flying High"
"The Trends Journal is a weekly magazine analyzing global current events forming future trends. Our mission is to present Facts and Truth over fear and propaganda to help subscribers prepare for What's Next in these increasingly turbulent times."
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