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Tuesday, March 24, 2026

The Poet: Henry Austin Dobson, “The Paradox Of Time”

“The Paradox Of Time”

“Time goes, you say? Ah no! 
Alas, Time stays, we go; 
Or else, were this not so, 
What need to chain the hours, 
For Youth were always ours? 

Time goes, you say? – ah no! 
Ours is the eyes’ deceit 
Of men whose flying feet 
Lead through some landscape low; 
We pass, and think we see 
The earth’s fixed surface flee - 
Alas, Time stays, – we go! 

Once in the days of old, 
Your locks were curling gold, 
And mine had shamed the crow. 
Now, in the self-same stage, 
We’ve reached the silver age; 
Time goes, you say? – ah no! 

Once, when my voice was strong, 
I filled the woods with song 
To praise your ‘rose’ and ‘snow’; 
My bird, that sang, is dead; 
Where are your roses fled? 
Alas, Time stays, – we go! 

See, in what traversed ways, 
What backward Fate delays 
The hopes we used to know; 
Where are our old desires? 
Ah, where those vanished fires? 
Time goes, you say? – ah no! 

How far, how far, O Sweet, 
The past behind our feet 
Lies in the even-glow! 
Now, on the forward way, 
Let us fold hands, and pray; 
Alas, Time stays, – we go!”

- Henry Austin Dobson
“Time passes in moments. Moments which, rushing past, define the path of a life, just as surely as they lead towards its end. How rarely do we stop to examine that path, to see the reasons why all things happen? To consider whether the path we take in life is our own making, or simply one into which we drift with eyes closed? But what if we could stop, pause to take stock of each precious moment before it passes? Might we then see the endless forks in the road that have shaped a life? And, seeing those choices, choose another path?”
- Gillian Anderson as Dana Scully, “The X-Files”

The Daily "Near You?"

Torino, Piemonte, Italy. Thanks for stopping by!

'Something You Already Know..."

“Let me tell you something you already know. The world ain't all sunshine and rainbows. It's a very mean and nasty place and I don't care how tough you are it will beat you to your knees and keep you there permanently if you let it. You, me, or nobody is gonna hit as hard as life. But it ain't about how hard ya hit. It's about how hard you can get it and keep moving forward. How much you can take and keep moving forward. That's how winning is done! Now if you know what you're worth then go out and get what you're worth. But ya gotta be willing to take the hits, and not pointing fingers saying you ain't where you wanna be because of him, or her, or anybody! Cowards do that and that ain't you! You're better than that!” 
- Rocky Balboa

"What Is The Point?"

"What is the point? We assume that every time we do anything we know what the consequences will be, i.e., more or less what we intend them to be. This is not only not always correct. It is wildly, crazily, stupidly, cross-eyed-blithering-insectly wrong!"
- Douglas Adams, “The Ultimate Hitchhiker's Guide”

"Judge Napolitano, Judging Freedom, 3/24/26"

Judge Napolitano - Judging Freedom, 3/24/26
"Prof. John Mearsheimer: No Way for Trump to Win"
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Judge Napolitano - Judging Freedom, 3/24/26
"Pepe Escobar: How Iran is Beating Trump"
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Judge Napolitano - Judging Freedom, 3/24/26
"LtCOL. Karen Kwiatkowski:
A Revolution in the US Military?"
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Judge Napolitano - Judging Freedom, 3/24/26
"Scott Ritter: What Awaits US Ground Troops"
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"Has A Global Catastrophe Been Averted, Or Is This Just A Very Temporary Reprieve?"

by Michael Snyder

"For the moment, we have avoided a global economic cataclysm. President Trump was threatening to completely destroy Iran’s power grid if the Iranians did not reopen the Strait of Hormuz, and in response the Iranians were threatening to destroy oil and gas infrastructure all over the Middle East. Once that infrastructure is gone it would have to be replaced, and that would take years. Meanwhile, the entire world would be forced to endure the worst energy crisis in human history and the economic fallout would be intolerable. The good news is that President Trump has announced that he will not be attacking Iran’s power grid for at least five days. I think that once Iran released the list of oil and gas facilities that would be targeted if their power grid got destroyed, Trump decided to reconsider his plans…

"Iran’s IRGC-affiliated Mehr news wrote: “In case of the slightest attack on the electricity infrastructure of the Islamic Republic of Iran, the entire region will go dark.” Here’s the target list it shared:

Saudi ArabiaThe Village (near Al-Khobar): gas power plant (4,000+ MW)
Ras Tanura (Sharqiya Province): major oil and gas facility/power infrastructure.

United Arab EmiratesBarakah (Al Dhafra, Abu Dhabi): nuclear power plant (~5,600 MW.)
Jebel Ali (South Dubai): gas power and desalination complex (multi-GW capacity.)
Mohammed bin Rashid Solar Park (Dubai): large-scale solar power project.

QatarRas Laffan (north Qatar): gas power plant (one of the largest in Qatar.)
Umm Al Houl (south of Doha): gas power + desalination plant (multi-GW capacity.)

KuwaitAl-Zour South: oil and gas power plant.
Al-Zour North: combined-cycle power plant (multi-GW capacity.)
Shaqaya Energy Park (west Kuwait): solar and wind renewable energy complex.

Please note that the Ras Laffan natural gas complex in Qatar is on that list.It normally produces approximately 20 percent of the world’s entire supply of liquified natural gas. 17 percent of that facility has already been destroyed, but if the rest of it gets wiped out that alone would be enough to plunge the globe into an economic death spiral that would last for years.

I am sure that Qatar and the other Gulf countries have been screaming at Trump to pull back before it is too late. Another reason why Trump could not attack Iranian power plants right now is because pro-regime civilians have started to form “human chains” around some of them…"Civilians in Ahvaz and Mashhad formed human chains around major power plants on Monday, according to footage published by the state‑run Fars news agency on Telegram. The videos show residents standing shoulder‑to‑shoulder outside the Ramin power plant in Ahvaz, many holding Iranian flags, while similar crowds gathered near a facility in Mashhad." Images of U.S. bombs blowing up women and children would have absolutely horrified people all over the planet. So there was no way that Trump could make good on his threats.

On Monday morning, Trump told the world that any attacks on the Iranian power grid have been delayed for at least five days…
It would be wonderful if “productive conversations” were taking place. Let us hope that is the truth. But the Iranians are completely denying that any conversations are taking place, and they are celebrating that Trump has “backed down”…"Shortly after US President Donald Trump announced that he is deferring “any and all” strikes on Iranian power plants and energy infrastructure on productive resolution talks, Iranian media reports denied any ‘direct’ or ‘intermediary’ communication with him.

“Trump, fearing Iran’s response, backed down from his 48-hour ultimatum,” Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting said in a post on X. Ebrahim Rezaei, Spokesperson of the National Security and Foreign Policy Commission reiterated the claims and said, “Trump and America have backed down again. The field is still charging forward. Another defeat for the devil,” in a post on X."

Each side is telling a completely different story. So what is the truth? It is being widely reported in the western media that the individual that the Trump administration is communicating with is Mohammad‑Bagher Ghalibaf, but he is strongly denying this…"Multiple news outlets reported in the past hour that U.S. envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner had been engaged in negotiations with Mohammad‑Bagher Ghalibaf, the speaker of Iran’s parliament. But an X account attributed to Ghalibaf swiftly rejected those claims, saying no discussions with the United States had taken place. The post accused unnamed actors of spreading “fake news” to manipulate global oil markets and insisted that the Iranian public “demand complete and remorseful punishment of the aggressors.”

Personally, I don’t know how Mohammad-Bagher Ghalibaf could have been much clearer.
And Iran’s Foreign Ministry is also telling us that there have been no negotiations…"Iran’s Foreign Ministry denied on Monday any direct negotiations with U.S. officials, but said “friendly countries” had conveyed messages from Washington seeking negotiations. “In recent days, messages were delivered through certain friendly countries indicating that the U.S. sought negotiations to end the war. These messages were appropriately addressed in line with our country’s principled positions,” Esmail Baqaei, spokesperson for the Iranian Foreign Ministry, told the country’s state news agency IRNA on Monday. “In our responses, we issued firm warnings about the severe consequences of any attack on Iran’s critical infrastructure, emphasizing that any action against Iran’s energy facilities would be met with a decisive, immediate, and effective response from our armed forces.” Maybe the Iranians are simply choosing not to tell the truth. Needless to say, they don’t exactly have a strong track record for veracity.

Despite Iran’s denials, Trump continues to insist that there have been “very, very strong talks”…“Well they’re going to have to get themselves better public relations people,” Mr. Trump said. “We have had very, very strong talks. We’ll see where they lead. We have points, major points of agreement, I would say almost all points of agreement. Perhaps that hasn’t been conveyed. The communication, as you know, has been blown to pieces.” The president would not say who his administration is speaking to in Iran, only saying it was a “top” person but not the supreme leader. Mr. Trump added that Iran contacted the U.S., saying, “So they called, I didn’t call. They called. They want to make a deal.”

Ultimately, I don’t think that any of this is going anywhere. As I write this article, missiles continue to fly all over the Middle East. The Iranians just launched more attacks, and the Israelis continue to pummel targets in Iranian territory. And thousands of U.S. Marines continue to sail toward the Middle East…

"There has been no change in plans to send thousands more Marines and sailors to the Middle East, military sources told CBS News. A second Marine Expeditionary Unit of about 2,200 Marines and three warships departed California last week, two U.S. officials previously said. It could take at least three weeks to be in place, although maybe more than that. The first Marine Expeditionary Unit, coming from the Pacific, is still making its way toward the region.

In addition to the Marine units that are on the way, it is also being reported that elements of the 82nd Airborne Division could soon be sent to the Middle East…"Senior military officials are weighing a possible deployment of a combat brigade from the Army’s 82nd Airborne Division and some elements of the division’s headquarters staff to support U.S. military operations in Iran, defense officials said."

I think that Trump is really hoping that Iran will give him the sort of deal that he is seeking. But that isn’t going to happen. And Trump can’t pull the U.S. out of the war as long as Iran is preventing commercial ships from traveling through the Strait of Hormuz and as long as Iran is hitting targets all over the Middle East with drones and missiles.

The Iranians feel like they have control over when this war will end, and so they are making all sorts of extremely outrageous demands that the U.S. and Israel can never possibly accept. They actually want all U.S. forces in the Middle East to be completely removed, they want to continue enriching uranium, and they want the U.S. and Israel to fully pay for all the damage that their bombing has caused. Needless to say, the U.S. and Israel will never agree to any of that.

So I think that this war is going to continue for quite some time, and I also think that more escalations are inevitable. And that is really bad news for the global economy, because this war has already had “a worse impact on oil than the two oil shocks of the 1970s combined”… "The head of the International Energy Agency said Monday that the global economy faces a “major, major threat” because of the Iran war. “No country will be immune to the effects of this crisis if it continues to go in this direction,” Fatih Birol said at Australia’s National Press Club in Canberra on Monday. The ​crisis in ​the Middle ⁠East, he said, has had a worse impact on oil than the two oil shocks of the 1970s combined, and a worse effect on gas than the Russia-Ukraine war.

We should all be thankful that a nightmare scenario has been avoided for the time being. But it appears that this is just a very temporary reprieve. The Iranians will never give Trump what he wants, and the U.S. and Israel will never give the Iranians what they are seeking. The two sides are not even in the same universe as far as what a peace deal should look like, and that means that a lot more fighting is still ahead."

"How It Really Is"

Never...
 

Dan, I Allegedly, "They’re All Closing! No One Is Safe"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 3/24/26
"They’re All Closing! No One Is Safe"
"Gas rationing is back and it’s already happening overseas. In Australia, drivers are being limited to $20 gas purchases, sparking panic as global oil markets face pressure from supply disruptions, the Strait of Hormuz shipping crisis, and rising geopolitical tensions. Even as oil prices drop, gas prices remain high - raising serious questions about supply chains, refinery capacity, and whether fuel shortages could spread to the United States next. If gas becomes restricted, the economy stops: deliveries halt, workers can’t commute, and businesses grind to a halt. In today’s episode of iAllegedly, Dan breaks down why gas rationing may be the next economic shock Americans face. From rising evictions in Orange County and insurance companies canceling policies to smart meters, surveillance concerns, and the growing cost of living crisis, everything points to a system under stress. History shows that energy shortages trigger panic and economic disruption. The real question is: Are we about to see 1970s-style gas lines return to America?"
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"Bamboozled..."

"One of the saddest lessons of history is this: If we've been bamboozled long enough, we tend to reject any evidence of the bamboozle. We're no longer interested in finding out the truth. The bamboozle has captured us. It's simply too painful to acknowledge, even to ourselves, that we've been taken. Once you give a charlatan power over you, you almost never get it back."
- Carl Sagan

Bill Bonner, "Bipartisan Boondoggles"

"Bipartisan Boondoggles"
by Bill Bonner

Youghal, Ireland - "We’re watching the news. Our head is spinning...where’s the rhyme? Where’s the reason? The Jerusalem Post: "US-Iran tensions rise as both sides threaten attacks on Gulf energy facilities." But hold on. That was on Saturday. Trump gave Iran 48 hours to free up the Strait of Hormuz.

Apparently, Iran’s supreme leader was in no mood for threats. His father, his mother, his sister, his nephew and his brother-in-law - all were murdered by the US/Israeli war machine. And his father was the spiritual leader of his faith...a bit like the Pope for Catholics. How likely was it that Mr. Khamenei would come to terms with Trump/Netanyahu and let bygones be bygones? Not very. He replied that if the US attacks his energy, he would attack energy infrastructure all around the Gulf.

‘Tit for tat,’ is how US commentators describe it, finally discovering that you reap what you sow. Then, Iran’s armed forces spokesman Abolfazl Shekarchi mentioned another tat that might be putting down roots: “We are watching your cowardly officials and commanders, pilots and wicked soldiers. From now on, based on the information we have on you, the promenades, resorts and tourist and entertainment centers in the world will not be safe.”

Taking the hint, The Independent: "US warns Americans across globe to ‘exercise increased caution’." It must have been about then...on Sunday...that Mr. Trump realized he had his own you-know-what in a wringer. Negotiator that he is, he tried to back out of the deal…a TACO...as he did with reciprocal sanctions, Greenland, and other things. His popularity was said to be crashing. Gas prices were going up. The economy might be going down. And most important, elections are coming. Reuters: "Trump backs down on strikes on Iran’s power network, says US and Tehran holding talks." He even proposed a “joint leadership” for Iran. Who would do it? ‘Me,’ he says, suggesting that the ‘me’ in question may have lost the plot completely.

Now, as he did with the Epstein files, POTUS is telling Americans to look the other way. The war ‘has already been won,’ he says. It’s over. Iran is ‘dead,’ he claims. And now we need a new enemy. Who dat? Cuba? The New York Post: "President Trump said Monday that he expects to have the “honor” of “taking Cuba,” days after the island’s communist government acknowledged it was in talks with the US. “You know, all my life I’ve been hearing about the United States and Cuba. When will the United States do it? “I do believe I’ll have the honor of taking Cuba...that’s a big honor.”

But then, we learned that he has another enemy in mind: Now with the death of Iran, the greatest enemy America has is the Radical Left, Highly Incompetent, Democrat Party! Thank you for your attention to this matter. We pause here to celebrate the president’s half-smart honesty. At 50%, he’s more right than usual. The biggest enemy the US faces is not Iran. Or Cuba. Or Russia. Or China.

None of them are likely to do Americans any harm, except inasmuch as we try to harm them. Our major enemies are not overseas. They are homegrown...homeland bound...homies. But he left out the other half of America’s big enemy - Republicans. Together the two parties put Americans in debt for $39 trillion dollars. That’s about $325,000 per family. And it’s currently going up by about $2 trillion per year - rising about twice as fast as GDP.

In other words, the two parties are doing something that China, Russia, Iran et al might like to do, but lack the means to do it. They’re bankrupting and impoverishing the USA. Both parties nodded in consent to the biggest boondoggles to come down the pike - the war on Iraq...the war on Afghanistan...Obamacare...the Wall Street bailout of 2008....the Covid lockdown and stimmie program...and now, the war on Iran. Obviously, America’s families can’t afford to pay for these things. Trump is right, too, that the attacks on Iran should end immediately. But it appears that he is not the one - or at least, not the only one - who is calling the shots.

Money talks. The politicians listen. And Netanyahu is telling them that Iran cannot be allowed to exist in its present form. Iran sees Israel as an existential threat, too...one that must be eliminated. Neither Netanyahu nor Khamenei seem inclined to CO (chicken out). And the question before us is this: has Armageddon been cancelled. Or merely postponed?

Unreconstructed catastrophists that we are, our advice today is to lay in some extra supplies of medicine and necessities. You never know when all Hell may break loose, and you never know where the sparks will fly...or what they may ignite."
o
Click image for larger size.
"Research Note"
by Dan Denning

"If there’s an off ramp to total currency destruction and hyperinflation, the US government had better take it now. The US Treasury Department has published its Financial Report of the United States government for 2025. The word ‘unsustainable’ appears 18 times. The word ‘crisis’ 14 times. Gold, a surprising 19 times (gold is an asset on the government’s balance sheet so it must necessarily show up somewhere).

The report is a slog. But we’ll go through it this week and report back to you on any new and important findings. For now, please note that debt held by the public finished 2025 at 99% of GDP. The historical high is 106%. From 1980 to 2025, the average was 53%. By the time debt-to-GDP reaches 576% (100 years from now, according to the report) America as we know it may no longer exist.

If government bonds become a casualty of the US war in Iran, then the American public or the Fed will have to buy more of it. The Fed may do so through Quantitative Easing - expanding the money supply (and inflation) out of thin air. The public, through financial repression, may be forced to buy government bonds to fund annual deficits of $2 trillion and annual interest payments of $1 trillion (unless the budget its balanced, spending is slashed, and the forever wars are ended)."

"The US Economy Is Shifting Fast… Layoffs Next!"

Full screen recommended.
Snyder Reports, 3/24/26
"The US Economy Is Shifting Fast… Layoffs Next!"
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Full screen recommended.
Snyder Reports, 3/24/26
"Retail Collapse? Thousands of Stores Shutting Down"
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"The Coming Shortages"

"The Coming Shortages"
Be an ant, not a grasshopper.
by Robert W. Malone, MD

"Four years ago, in 2022, I wrote a series of articles about the war in Ukraine and the eruption of the Tonga volcano, and how those events would drive inflation and shortages, causing price spikes across many categories. That largely came to pass as I had predicted. After Biden’s disastrous presidency, the economy under President Trump and inflation have both improved significantly. But here we are again, on the precipice of another crisis that the media has largely missed.

First, we have the Iranian war and what it is doing to the cost of fuel. Fuel costs drive almost everything. That makes it very difficult for President Trump to use creative measures to keep inflation at bay, particularly since he does not control the Federal Reserve, which sets the key benchmarks which determine interest rates.

As the war has escalated, the situation in the Middle East has become more dire. The region has currently lost about 7 to 10 million barrels per day of effective oil production, while export flows are down more than 15 million barrels per day.

In percentage terms, that is roughly a 7 to 10 percent hit to total global supply, paired with about a 15 percent disruption to global trade flows. Add to that the Strait of Hormuz, which normally carries about 20 percent of the world’s oil, and it becomes clear that this is not just another regional conflict.

This is a large shock by any historical standard. Even small supply disruptions can move prices. A high single-digit to low double-digit disruption, combined with a logistics choke point, is enough to keep world oil prices elevated and refined product markets tight.

What matters here is that this is not just about oil that is no longer being produced. A significant portion of the problem is oil that exists but cannot move. Tanker risk, insurance constraints, and rerouting limitations mean that available barrels are effectively stranded. That is why export losses are outpacing production losses, and why the system feels tighter than the raw supply numbers alone would suggest.

Worldwide, availability becomes the bigger problem if the Strait of Hormuz remains disrupted. Oil does not get shared evenly. Higher-income countries will continue to secure supply, while more import-dependent and price-sensitive regions have begun to experience real shortages, particularly in diesel, jet fuel, and other refined products.

In the United States, the situation is different. Direct exposure to Persian Gulf imports is relatively small, on the order of 2 to 3 percent of total consumption (thank you President Trump 1.0). That means the near-term issue is not empty gas stations. It is price. Because oil is globally priced, a 7 to 10 percent global supply shock translates into higher gasoline, diesel, and transportation costs across the board.

So the immediate effect in the U.S. is inflationary pressure rather than physical scarcity. But if the disruption persists for months, those global percentages stop being abstract. They begin to show up as tightening supply chains, reduced refining flexibility, and eventually localized shortages. Because this is a worldwide shortage, it affects inflation and supply in ways that go far beyond fuel costs. Clothing is made of synthetic materials derived from oil. Plastics come from oil. Packaging, transport, manufacturing. It all traces back.

“Soup to Nuts” is Not an Exaggeration: But here is the part that should really get people’s attention. China saw this coming early. Long before most Western governments were willing to acknowledge the scale of disruption, China began locking down key inputs. Fertilizer was at the top of that list. The CCP is not benign; when push comes to shove, it is all about China and China’s dominance in world markets. They are not honest brokers, they work to monopolize key resources and every effort should be made so that they can not do so, whether it be for semiconductor chips, lithium, or fertilizer production. China has not shut off fertilizer exports entirely, but it has pulled back in a big way.

Depending on the product category, between 50 percent and 70 to 80 percent of export volumes are now restricted or effectively blocked. That is not a minor adjustment. That is a major contraction. What this looks like on the ground is fairly straightforward. Key products like phosphate fertilizers and NPK blends are being heavily limited or outright curtailed.

Bottom line, China has not gone to zero. But cutting back by roughly half to three-quarters of export capacity is more than enough to cause worldwide disruptions in agriculture, particularly for countries that have come to depend on Chinese fertilizer to keep their agricultural systems running.

Fertilizer is Not Optional: Modern agriculture runs on three primary nutrients: nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium. Nitrogen fertilizer is heavily dependent on natural gas. Potash and phosphate are mined and globally traded. China plays a major role in all three, particularly in processing and export. When they restricted fertilizer exports and prioritized domestic supply, they effectively tightened the spigot for the rest of the world overnight. A world caught flat-footed.

Now layer that on top of a war that directly disrupts two of the other major players. Russia and Belarus are among the largest exporters of potash and nitrogen fertilizers. Sanctions, shipping disruptions, and insurance constraints have all reduced availability. The Middle East, a key source of natural gas used to manufacture nitrogen fertilizers, is now unstable.

Russia has suspended exports of ammonium nitrate during the spring planting of this year, to prioritize its domestic needs: "The restriction was introduced based on a decision of the operational headquarters of the Russian Agriculture Ministry...In the context of growing export demand for nitrogen fertilizers, suspending their supplies abroad will make it possible to prioritize meeting the needs of the domestic market during the spring field work period ," From Russia's Agriculture Ministry.

This is not a small problem. This is the foundation of the global food system. The United States is not insulated. We do produce some fertilizer domestically, but nowhere near enough to be independent, and much of the upstream supply chain remains globally entangled. Over the last few decades, we have hollowed out domestic capacity and become dependent on imports and just-in-time delivery.

Farmers operate on thin margins and tight timelines. They cannot simply wait it out. If fertilizer is too expensive or unavailable at planting, yields drop. Not a little. A lot. Corn, for example, is extremely nitrogen hungry. Cut fertilizer, and you cut yield. It really is that simple. Farmers should be very concerned right now. But for most, the reality hasn’t sunken in yet. And consumers will feel it, whether they realize the cause or not.

First comes the produce aisle. Fruits and vegetables, especially those that rely on intensive fertilization, will rise quickly in price. Then the staples follow. Wheat, corn, soy. These are not just foods themselves; they are inputs into everything else. Corn becomes feed. Soy becomes feed. Feed becomes meat. So when fertilizer prices spike, animal feed costs rise. When feed costs rise, meat, dairy, and eggs follow. It cascades through the system.

There is also a timing issue that most people miss. You do not see the full effect immediately. Fertilizer decisions made this planting season show up at harvest. That means the real impact often hits months later, and then lingers. So what we are looking at is not just a short-term price spike, but a rolling wave. Higher input costs. Lower yields. Tighter supply. And ultimately, significantly higher food prices. Including restaurants.

If Oil is the Headline, Fertilizer is the Story: Energy shocks attract attention. Fertilizer shocks reshape civilizations. This war is not just tightening fuel markets. It is tightening the inputs that grow food, move goods, and sustain modern agriculture. About a third of the global fertilizer trade now passes through the same chokepoint that is the subject of a dispute. Energy producers, fertilizer companies, agricultural commodities, and the entire supply chain will adjust. At the same time, anything that reduces dependence on these inputs will quietly gain value. And as always, the real story is not what is obvious today, but what shows up six months from now. Right about the same time as the US midterm elections. One thing is clear. The United States will likely invest heavily in rebuilding fertilizer manufacturing capacity.

In the meantime, the USA is in crisis management. The administration has issued a 60-day waiver of the Jones Act to speed fertilizer deliveries inside the U.S. The Jones Act, for those who do not live and breathe maritime law, requires goods moved between U.S. ports to be carried on American-built, American-owned, American-flagged, and American-crewed ships.

In normal times, that protects domestic shipping. In times like this, it becomes a bottleneck. There simply are not enough qualifying ships to move everything, including oil and fertilizer, where it needs to go. Waiving it, even temporarily, allows foreign vessels to step in and move critical supplies along the coastline. At the same time, the administration is seeking alternative imports from countries such as Venezuela and Morocco. But they are competing with the rest of the world for those same tons of fertilizer. That means higher prices and tighter availability are likely to persist.

Conclusion: This is not a crisis that will resolve quickly, nor one that will remain confined to the Middle East. It will work its way quietly through inputs, supply chains, and timing. First energy, then fertilizer, then food. Most people will not notice until the cost increases reach the grocery store. By then, the decisions that drove those prices will already have been made months earlier. So this is the window. Not for panic, but for preparation. Tighten where you can. Plant what you can. Store what makes sense. Because this is not just about higher prices. It is about less margin for error. Be careful out there!"
o

Adventures With Danno, "Stocking Up At Walmart Before Prices Go Up!"

Full screen recommended.
Adventures With Danno, 3/24/26
"Stocking Up At Walmart Before Prices Go Up!"
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Monday, March 23, 2026

"Alert! Iran Threatens Armageddon! Russia Is Burning, Major Escalation Incoming!"

Full screen recommended.
Canadian Prepper, 3/23/26
"Alert! Iran Threatens Armageddon! 
Russia Is Burning, Major Escalation Incoming!"
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"Watch This Before You Shop At Costco Again"

Full screen recommended.
Epic Economist, 3/23/26
"Watch This Before You Shop At Costco Again"
"Costco was supposed to be the one place you could still count on. So why are people leaving with $589 grocery bills and having panic attacks in the grocery store? Millions of Americans are waking up to something bigger than just price hikes. Shrinkflation, dynamic pricing, gas at $5 a gallon even at Costco, and pricing tactics that don't add up at the register. This isn't bad luck. This is strategy. In this video, we break down what real shoppers across the country are experiencing right now and why the gap between corporate profits and everyday Americans has never felt wider. Drop a comment below, are prices still climbing where you live? Have you noticed any of these tactics yourself?"
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"Did Trump Win The War Or is This Fake News? The Markets Are Celebrating For Now"

Jeremiah Babe, 3/23/26
"Did Trump Win The War Or is This Fake News?
 The Markets Are Celebrating For Now"
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Musical Interlude: Liquid Mind: "Slow World"

Liquid Mind: "Slow World"

"A Look to the Heavens"

“Planetary nebula Abell 78 stands out in this colorful telescopic skyscape. In fact the colors of the spiky Milky Way stars depend on their surface temperatures, both cooler (yellowish) and hotter (bluish) than the Sun. But Abell 78 shines by the characteristic emission of ionized atoms in the tenuous shroud of material shrugged off from an intensely hot central star. The atoms are ionized, their electrons stripped away, by the central star's energetic but otherwise invisible ultraviolet light.
The visible blue-green glow of loops and filaments in the nebula's central region corresponds to emission from doubly ionized oxygen atoms, surrounded by strong red emission from electrons recombining with hydrogen atoms. Some 5,000 light-years distant toward the constellation Cygnus, Abell 78 is about three light-years across. A planetary nebula like Abell 78 represents a very brief final phase in stellar evolution that our own Sun will experience... in about 5 billion years.”

"When We Have Time..."

“How small a portion of our life it is that we really enjoy. In youth we are looking forward to things that are to come; in old age, we are looking backwards to things that are gone past; in manhood, although we appear indeed to be more occupied in things that are present, yet even that is too often absorbed in vague determinations to be vastly happy on some future day, when we have time.”
- Charles Caleb Colton, “Lacon”
“The problem is, you believe you have time.”
- Buddha

"A Hammer Blow..."

"Do as little harm to others as you can; make any sacrifice for your true friends; be responsible for yourself and ask nothing of others; and grab all the fun you can. Don't give much thought to yesterday, don't worry about tomorrow, live in the moment, and trust that your existence has meaning even when the world seems to be all blind chance and chaos. When life lands a hammer blow in your face, do your best to respond to the hammer as if it had been a cream pie."
- Dean Koontz

"The Lighter Side Of Dating, Mating, And Civilizational Collapse'

"The Lighter Side Of Dating,
Mating, And Civilizational Collapse'
by John Wilder

"Even thirty years ago, finding a spouse was as easy as grabbing a beer at a kegger. You met. Maybe at school, maybe at church, maybe at work, maybe some friends introduced you. Hell, maybe at the kegger. It was a straightforward and reliable process, and it was also often sweaty and fun.

Even before my time, though, it was even easier. Take it back to the 1800s, and men brought home the bacon, women kept the hearth warm, and together they built a life, maybe a farm, maybe a picket fence. Often, people would meet and spend their whole lives in the same location. The process wasn’t perfect, but it worked for thousands of years.

Fast-forward to 2026, and the mating market is a dumpster fire. A constant source of conversation is the baby bust, describing how women aren’t reproducing enough children to keep society going. Part of the reason for that is that cultural shifts and technological disruptions have turned love from carnal creativity in the backseat of a Camaro™ to the swipe of a finger on the smooth glass of a screen protector. The result? A generation of lonely hearts, spinsters, and guys who’ve decided sweatpants and beer are a better deal than chasing women who don’t even see them as people. Culture and tech crashed the human mating economy, and why it’s tearing the family, the atom of society, to shreds.

For thousands of years, societies kept a lid on female promiscuity, not because of some patriarchal conspiracy (okay maybe it was, we’re still meeting Thursday night, right guys?), but because it worked.

People who tear down traditions often don’t realize exactly what they’re destroying until it’s gone, and then it’s too late because the fragile fabric that it was supporting has collapsed. It’s sort of like playing Jenga™ with retarded monkeys on crack, but I won’t speak any more about how I know that.

Tradition knew what science later confirmed: high rates of female promiscuity correlate with lower marriage rates and higher divorce rates. Skanky women are horrible for society. A 2020 study from the Institute for Family Studies found that women with more sexual partners before marriage are less likely to stay married. They graph waivers after the big increase in marrying a woman who has had more than one sex partner to a big drop at around four sex partners (for some reason). If you can’t get a virgin, four seems to be the lucky number. But if you’re the 167th guy to tap into that action?

The chances of you being “the one” are nearly zero, yet in 2026 she still wants a ring worth six months of blood, sweat and tears and a house and she brings...you being number 167. Back when shame was a thing, women faced social pressure to be selective, and men had a reason to step up for a low-mileage woman. Now? Shame is as outdated as a Marvel™ movie. Women are free to “explore” and “find themselves” and “live their best life” all while banging a never ending stream of potential Prince Charmings.

Then there’s money. Historically, men were the breadwinners, or at least the leaders in the grind in the family business or farm, with Ma raising the kids and churning the butter while Pa tamed the back 40. Women relied on men for financial stability, and men relied on women to keep the home and raise the children.

Enter the modern workforce: women now make up nearly half of U.S. workers and 90% of the human resources department everywhere. That leads to the dilemma of the Stunning and Brave woman: she wants a man who makes more than her, yet demands equal pay. A 2023 Pew Research study found 55% of women prefer a partner with higher income (and 45% of women are liars). That’s fine, but men’s wages have stagnated since the 1970s while women’s have risen. The math doesn’t add up.

Worse, the government has stepped in as Husband 2.0. Welfare programs, from food stamps to housing subsidies, act like a sugar daddy for single women, especially mothers. In 2022, over 40% of single-mother households received some form of public assistance. Why marry a man when Uncle Sugar’s got your back and they can still bang all the men they want and don’t have to listen to any man?

Women on welfare aren’t wives anymore; they’re concubines of the state, trading solemn vows for EBT and government cheese. The family, once the bedrock of civilization, is now a casualty of games and prizes fueled by promiscuity and feminism. But I repeat myself.

And that’s not even factoring in divorce-rape where unhaaaaapppy or bored women can hit the eject button and blow up the marriage with no real consequences except getting to keep the house, kids, cash and getting a free ticket to ride on the Chad carousel.

That’s bad enough. It’s actually worse than Madonna’s herpes. If culture cracked the mating market, technology crushed it like a python on a peanut. Enter Tinder®, Bumble®, and the swipe-right revolution. Women, all women, are hypergamous. They want the very best mate they can find. Society used to keep them in check through societal pressure. Oh, and soon enough they would have run out of random men to pleasure. Now the apps give them a digital buffet of Chads, Brads, and Thads. Is anyone named Thaddeus nowadays? I digress.

A 2021 study showed women on dating apps rate 80% of men as “below average” in attractiveness, while men rate women more realistically on a bell curve. The result? A 5 or 6 woman swipes right on a 10. Call him Prince Charming the Senator’s son, complete with abs and a hedge fund, who might bang her once but won’t stick around for breakfast or be seen in public with her, let alone hang a ring on her.

She walks away thinking, “He was the one, I could get him to marry me,” and now every guy who doesn’t match up to Prince Charming is... settling. Yes. Settling, even though Prince Charming doesn’t remember her and only picked her up because it was a Tuesday, and was just taking his father’s deathbed advice: “go ugly, early” and picked her up just for amusement. Spinsterhood beckons, with a side of cat and wine memes.

Men aren’t entirely innocent bystanders here, either. Faced with an endless parade of women chasing the top 10% of guys, many men have thrown in the towel. Why grind for a better job, hit the gym, or learn to dress like you didn’t just roll out of a laundry basket?

A 2024 survey found 30% of men aged 18-29 have given up on dating entirely, opting for porn, video games, or “monk mode.” They’re not wrong to notice the game is rigged against traditional one-for-one sorting. Now, Chad gets his choice, and, if they’re lucky, he might get the attention of a slagged-out woman who is still pining for Chad – a widow for a man that was only in her life for a night.

This isn’t just about lonely Friday nights. This is about the death of the family. Men want decent looks, monogamy, and a partner who’s kind - basic stuff. “She can’t read but she’s faithful and hasn’t had sex with Baltimore” has become a passing grade for many. Women want the whole package: money, status, looks, protection, and a guy who’s basically a football star with a corner office. Wait. Tom Brady didn’t work out for his wife. Neil Armstrong’s wife became unhaaaapppy. What chance does the average guy have?

Marriage rates are at historic lows, being down 60% since 1960. Divorce rates hover around 40%. Kids grow up in fractured homes or none at all, with single-parent households now at 30% nationwide and rising. The family, the core unit, the atom that glues society together, is being eroded by individualism on steroids. I could write a book about this topic, but you get the idea.

So how do we dig out of this mess? Start with culture. Bring back shame. The scarlet-letter kind. Encourage women to value loyalty over chasing Chad, and men to step up instead of checking out. That starts with incentives, because I don’t think anyone has any shame left.

Let’s rethink current incentives. Have a kid and no husband? Tough luck. No child support, no state support. Same thing with divorce. No fun and prizes for that, and if you’re at-fault, you lose the kids. Sure, tax breaks for married couples or policies that don’t make Uncle Sugar a better bet than a husband are nice, but we don’t need a nudge, we need a nuke.

Will the norm come back? It has to. Two more generations of this, and civilization will cease to exist. Perhaps G. Michael Hopf (LINK) got the old quote wrong and it should go more like this:

Bad times create strong men,
Strong men create good times,
Good times make women skanky,
Skanky women create bad times.

Don’t worry, nothing’s depending on this. I mean, nothing other than the fate of civilization."

"Carl Jung: The Desire Not to Exist & The Void After Awakening"

Full screen recommended.
Fractal Wisdom,
"Carl Jung: The Desire Not to Exist &
 The Void After Awakening"
"What happens after ego death? Why does spiritual awakening sometimes lead to a quiet desire not to exist - not as a wish to die, but as exhaustion with identity itself? There is a phase after spiritual awakening that almost no one talks about. The ego dissolves. Meaning collapses. Motivation fades. And instead of bliss, you feel neutral, detached, or strangely disconnected from life. You’re not suicidal. You’re not necessarily depressed. You may simply no longer identify with the version of yourself that once chased goals, approval, or survival. Through Carl Jung’s depth psychology, existential psychology, and grounded spiritual. But this is not about escaping life. It’s about losing identification with a false structure before a deeper self stabilizes.

Jung described individuation as a process of psychological reconstruction. After ego death, the old mask (persona) falls away. But the new architecture of the self takes time to emerge. That gap can feel like emptiness, neutrality, or even a desire not to exist as a defined identity. If these feelings feel overwhelming, isolating, or unsafe, please reach out to someone you trust or a qualified mental health professional. Psychological transformation should never be navigated alone.frameworks, we unpack what happens when the ego dissolves faster than a new identity can form."
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The Poet: Mary Oliver, "One"


"One"

"The mosquito is so small
it takes almost nothing to ruin it.
Each leaf, the same.
And the black ant, hurrying.
So many lives, so many fortunes!
Every morning, I walk softly and with forward glances
down to the ponds and through the pinewoods.
Mushrooms, even, have but a brief hour
before the slug creeps to the feast,
before the pine needles hustle down
under the bundles of harsh, beneficent rain.
How many, how many, how many
make up a world!
And then I think of that old idea: the singular
and the eternal.
One cup, in which everything is swirled
back to the color of the sea and sky.
Imagine it!
A shining cup, surely!
In the moment in which there is no wind
over your shoulder,
you stare down into it,
and there you are,
your own darling face, your own eyes.
And then the wind, not thinking of you, just passes by,
touching the ant, the mosquito, the leaf,
and you know what else!
How blue is the sea, how blue is the sky,
how blue and tiny and redeemable everything is, even you,
even your eyes, even your imagination."

~ Mary Oliver

The Daily "Near You?"

Lynn, Massachusetts, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"The Heart of Humanity"

"The Heart of Humanity"
by Madisyn Taylor, The DailyOM

"Sitting with our sadness takes the courage to believe that we can bear the pain and we will come out the other side. The last thing most of us want to hear or think about when we are dealing with profound feelings of sadness is that deep learning can be found in this place. In the midst of our pain, we often feel picked on by life, or overwhelmed by the enormity of some loss, or simply too exhausted to try and examine the situation. We may feel far too disappointed and angry to look for anything resembling a bright side to our suffering. Still, somewhere in our hearts, we know that we will eventually emerge from the depths into the light of greater awareness. Remembering this truth, no matter how elusive it seems, can help.

The other thing we often would rather not hear when we are dealing with intense sadness is that the only way out of it is through it. Sitting with our sadness takes the courage to believe that we can bear the pain and the faith that we will come out the other side. With courage, we can allow ourselves to cycle through the grieving process with full inner permission to experience it. This is a powerful teaching that sadness has to offer us. - the ability to surrender and the acceptance of change go hand in hand.

Another teaching of sadness is compassion for others who are in pain, because it is only in feeling our own pain that we can really understand and allow for someone else’s. Sadness is something we all go through, and we all learn from it and are deepened by its presence in our lives. While our own individual experiences of sadness carry with them unique lessons, the implications of what we learn are universal. The wisdom we gain from going through the process of feeling loss, heartbreak, or deep disappointment gives us access to the heart of humanity."

"Looking for a Reason to Believe: The Benefit of the Doubt Is Cracking"

"Looking for a Reason to Believe: 
The Benefit of the Doubt Is Cracking"
by Paul Rosenberg

"Those of us who pursue positive change are very often frustrated. We see the necessity of change all too clearly, and we can explain how it should come about, but it never seems to happen. The truth, however, is that change does come; it just comes more slowly than we’d like, and in ways that differ from those we imagined.

One real change I like to point out is the passing of blind trust in politicians. In the 1950s and ‘60s, most people spoke of politicians with respect and even with reverence. Now it’s almost standard for people to agree that they’re liars and thieves. That’s a very significant change, even if it did take several decades to unfold. So, a significant change has occurred in our time, and over a very broad base. Still, most people are hanging on, and often desperately, to old ways that should really be abandoned.

The Automatic Benefit of the Doubt: It’s a bit troubling to see how blindly, and for how long, people give the benefit of the doubt to hierarchy and its operators. They can know that a system is abusing them, and they can complain about it at length, but still they grasp at reasons to keep believing in it.

Here’s what I mean: During the bad spots of the Middle Ages, people would be abused by the clergy but say, “If only His Holiness knew!” During the reign of the USSR, people in the Gulag would often say, “If only Stalin knew!” In our time, people hold Political Party A or Political Party B as grave evils, while pretending that the combination of A + B is good and noble.

Still, such blind biases do eventually break. Stalin, after all, is gone, along with his USSR. The Protestant reformation broke the domination of the Church. And the delusions of our time will die as well.

“Still, I look to Find a Reason to Believe”: If there were such a competition, I’d nominate Rod Stewart’s song, "Reason To Believe," as the Anthem of the Age. Regardless of how badly they are abused, people have a very hard time letting go of their hierarchies; they’ve taken emotional refuge in them, after all. Even when sharp pain forces them to examine the hierarchy that constantly tells them, “Obey or we’ll hurt you,” the impulse to maintain belief erupts. Here’s how the song expresses it:

"If I listened long enough to you,
I’d find a way to believe that it’s all true.
Knowing that you lied,
straight-faced while I cried.
Still I look to find a reason to believe."

Humans have a real problem with that last line: looking for reasons to believe. It flies in the face of both logic and honesty, but people not only do it, but vigorously defend it. As for specific reasons to believe, they’re endless. Seldom are humans quicker and cleverer than when justifying their previous actions.

Why This Is a Good Sign: When people are desperately grasping for reasons to believe, it’s because the benefit of the doubt is cracking beneath them. Otherwise, why would they fight so wildly? The circumstances of our modern world are propelling people toward this break. Every time a ruling system tells gigantic lies, censors the public square, surveils their own people and frightens the masses for their own benefit, belief in their system cracks a little.

More and more people are conceding that it’s not just “one bad actor” here or there, but that Joe Stalin really is evil, that the clergy really is corrupt, and that hierarchies are abusive by nature. The whirlwind of distractions and slogans arrayed against moral clarity are losing their effectiveness. Little by little, humanity’s blind devotion to authority is cracking. Someday, it will break."
o
Rod Stewart, "Reason To Believe"