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Wednesday, May 27, 2026

The Poet: John Donne, "For Whom the Bell Tolls"

"For Whom the Bell Tolls"

"No man is an island,
Entire of itself.
Each is a piece of the continent,
A part of the main.
If a clod be washed away by the sea,
Europe is the less.
As well as if a promontory were.
As well as if a manor of thine own
Or of thine friend's were.
Each man's death diminishes me,
For I am involved in mankind.
Therefore, send not to know
For whom the bell tolls,
It tolls for thee."

- John Donne

"Never, Ever Forget..."

"Never, ever forget that nothing in this life is free. Life demands payment in some form for your "right" to express yourself, to condemn and abuse the evil surrounding us. Expect to pay... it will come for you, they will come for you, regardless. Knowing that, give them Hell itself every chance you can. Expect no mercy, and give none. That's how life works. Be ready to pay for what you do, or be a coward, pretend you don't see, don't know, and cry bitter tears over how terrible things are, over how you let them become."
- Ernest Hemingway, "For Whom the Bell Tolls"
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Freely download "For Whom the Bell Tolls" here:

"Native American Elder Shares Truths About Loneliness Nobody Talks About"

Full screen recommended.
Native Elder,
"Native American Elder Shares Truths 
About Loneliness Nobody Talks About"
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"When You Feel Alone, Pray and Forever Love, Finding Peace in Loss"

 
Full screen recommended.
"When You Feel Alone, Pray and Forever Love,
 Finding Peace in Loss"
"This song is for anyone who has ever loved deeply and lost, yet still finds the strength to smile at the sky. It’s a reminder that we are never truly alone when we walk with faith. Whether your house feels empty or your heart feels heavy, may you find peace in the stillness."

"By the Time You Learn What Matters"

Delta Blues Brother, 
"By the Time You Learn What Matters"
"Most people spend years chasing the wrong things. And only later realize… what actually mattered. “By the Time You Learn What Matters” is a Delta blues reflection on work, time, family, and the quiet truth that life’s biggest treasures are usually the simplest ones."

"How It Really Is"

 

"Nobody Gets A Break Anymore - Death by a 1000 Cuts"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 5/27/26
"Nobody Gets A Break Anymore - 
Death by a 1000 Cuts"
"Americans are feeling squeezed from every direction as inflation, taxes, insurance costs, medical bills, layoffs, and rising living expenses continue to crush the middle class. In this episode of i Allegedly, Dan breaks down the financial stress hitting everyday people, including outrageous ambulance charges, hidden insurance scams, SNAP benefit theft, speed trap enforcement, rising crime, job layoffs, skyrocketing gas prices, and why so many Americans are struggling just to survive financially in 2026. 

This video covers personal finance, economic collapse concerns, government overreach, hospital billing scams, business closures, grocery inflation, auto repair costs, and why millions of working Americans feel financially exhausted. Dan also discusses Kroger lowering grocery prices, businesses fleeing high-tax states like Washington and California, and why more people are abandoning cars because they simply can’t afford maintenance anymore. If you’re worried about inflation, the economy, layoffs, debt, taxes, or financial survival, this is a must-watch discussion."
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"Wars And Rumors of Wars: The Middle East 5/27/26"

Full screen recommended.
Dialogue Works, 5/27/26
"Laith Marouf: No One Saw This Coming:
 Hezbollah Smashes IDF Frontline"
Comments here:
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Judge Napolitano - Judging Freedom, 5/27/26
"Professor Jeffrey Sachs:
Trump Has No Lifeline Out of Iran"
Comments here:
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Judge Napolitano - Judging Freedom, 5/27/26
"Aaron Maté: Netanyahu Will Reject Peace"
Comments here:
o
Judge Napolitano - Judging Freedom, 5/27/26
"Phil Giraldi: Trump Full Speed Ahead on Israel"
Comments here:

"Jesus Tells Dead Man Everything Will Be Shaken Down in 2026!"

"Jesus Tells Dead Man Everything Will Be Shaken Down in 2026!"
And Trump is the one who will bring it all down.
by Dail Haggith

"Since I wrote an editorial on the holiday, today’s editorial will be short, but I have a video for you below. Off the usual reporting beat here, but I found it interesting as someone who has researched and written on near-death experiences (NDEs) in my distant past. The story purports that Jesus told a man after his heart stopped that Trump is God’s catalyst to bring destruction down on the US and global financial system and the Earth’s political systems. Trump will be brought down with it all, participating in his own collapse. What I found interesting is how closely the predictions in this NDE parallel my own view of Trump, which I’ve been expressing for some time. That, to me made it worth sharing, at least, as curiosity.
While Trump’s White House prophets - the priests and priestess of the Orange cult, whom I’ve covered occasionally - claim he is God’s anointed leader to make America great again, elevating Trump like he’s some kind of savior, this NDE says he is not a savior of anything. He is a catalyst for bringing it all down, not because he is scheming to do such great evil evil but simply because his character flaws mirror the greed and all the cracks of a divided America. His flaws will, in essence arouse matching harmonics within the financial system and the pride in our politics and self-serving corporate corruption, and those flaws will resonate so deeply to his own that his actions and ways of doing things will divide the nation and the nations around it like a high soprano shatters a champagne flute.

My way of putting it, rather than saying he is “God’s catalyst for destruction” - though I think it means the same thing - has been to say that, “If Trump IS appointed by God, as his prophets claim, it is (unbeknownst to his prophets) to be God’s wrecking ball for America and the whole world.” The system is deeply corrupt and riddled with flaws, and according to this NDE, 2026 is the year for bringing it all down.

While I have no idea if this NDE story is genuine, I find what it describes for 2026 to be easily believable because it is SO in line with my own thinking about how vulnerable the corrupt US and global system now is - how ready to collapse - and I certainly believe Trump is exactly the guy who is already bringing all down. Though it is not his evil design to bring down America, just as the NDE claims, he will bring it down by deeply flawed nature, being the man at the center of global power, even though he believes he will make America great again. Even if you don’t believe in God, you may find the account an interesting curiosity just for the sake of watching to see how the facts play out in the months ahead. In my view, the whole global world order is badly shaking already, not because Trump is smart enough to break it, but because he is corrupt enough to break it, given all the power that has been given to him.

Foreshadowing all of that, Trump’s fragile schmeasefire crumbled a little around the edges today, hinting at what a failure it is ultimately going to be, which is why I call it the “schmeasefire” not “ceasefire.” The US saw the Iranian navy - the navy that Trump has repeatedly said no longer exits - using its boats to place more mines in the Strait of Hormuz. So, the US navy destroyed two of the Iranian boats and attacked some mainland missile launch sites. Iran’s attack drones, then, moved in threatening ways against the US navy in response, and it vowed a reprisal.

Gen. Seyed Majid Mousavi, commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Aerospace Force, said on X: “Negotiation with the enemy is pure loss. The treacherous enemy has once again violated the cease-fire during the time of negotiations. The Aerospace Force of the IRGC is prepared for a decisive, swift response and the implementation of measures ordered by the esteemed Commander-in-Chief.”

It will be interesting (to me anyway) to see if the global cookie crumbles the way the collapse is described in the video below. I certainly don’t find it hard to believe that it will!"
o
"Michael Hudson Warns: Imminent Economic 
Catastrophe - War, Oil Crisis & Bond Market Panic"

"When The Grid Dies: Inside the First 90 Days of America’s Vanished Civilization"

"When The Grid Dies: Inside the First 90 Days of America’s Vanished 
Civilization -  How a Single Blackout Could Unravel a Modern World"
by Milan Adams

Editor’s Note: For decades, infrastructure analysts, military planners, and emergency preparedness experts have warned that modern civilization is built upon a dangerously fragile foundation. Electricity is no longer merely a convenience of industrial society; it is the bloodstream of every institution sustaining modern life. Water purification systems, food distribution chains, hospitals, communication networks, banking systems, fuel pipelines, transportation corridors, satellite infrastructure, and emergency services all depend upon uninterrupted electrical continuity. What follows is a dramatized reconstruction of a prolonged nationwide blackout and the sequence of societal failures that unfolds afterward. Though fictionalized for narrative intensity, the mechanisms behind the collapse are rooted in real vulnerabilities documented by energy experts, cybersecurity specialists, and federal emergency studies over the past several decades.

"The First Day - The Extinguishing of the Great Machine: At 4:12 in the morning, long before sunrise reached the eastern seaboard, the first disturbances began spreading through the electrical arteries of the United States. Inside regional grid control centers, operators noticed unstable fluctuations racing through transmission frequencies connecting several major sectors of the national power network. Similar anomalies had appeared before during severe storms or regional overload incidents, and at first the event seemed manageable. Automated balancing protocols activated instantly while engineers attempted to isolate unstable sectors before the disturbance propagated farther outward. Yet within minutes the system began behaving in ways that experienced technicians later described as deeply unnatural.

Massive substations disconnected from the network one after another as transformers erupted under abnormal strain. Entire transmission corridors collapsed in rapid succession across multiple states while gas compressor stations abruptly failed after synchronization systems destabilized. Power plants automatically disengaged from the grid to protect turbines from catastrophic overload damage, but the protective measures only accelerated the wider collapse already spreading across the country. Before dawn had fully broken, immense regions of the United States disappeared into darkness.

The first reaction among the public was irritation rather than fear. Alarm clocks failed. Wireless networks vanished. Elevators froze between floors. Morning commuters discovered traffic lights dead at major intersections while gas stations sat powerless beside clogged roads. Millions initially assumed the outage would last only a few hours because modern populations had become psychologically conditioned to believe every disruption was temporary and every institution fundamentally stable. Yet beneath the surface of ordinary frustration, panic had already begun inside the agencies responsible for maintaining national order.

Cellular networks became overloaded almost immediately as millions attempted to contact relatives simultaneously. Emergency dispatch systems collapsed beneath an avalanche of calls reporting fires, traffic collisions, medical emergencies, and electrical accidents. Airports grounded flights across the country while financial institutions struggled to maintain even minimal continuity. Then, shortly before midmorning, another layer of modern civilization began deteriorating as large portions of the internet itself started disappearing region by region. Data centers exhausted backup reserves. Routing infrastructure failed. Communication nodes vanished from the network faster than technicians could stabilize them. Social media descended into chaos before becoming inaccessible entirely across many states.

Inside federal emergency facilities, the atmosphere shifted from concern into dread. Continuity-of-government protocols were activated before sunrise while intelligence analysts attempted to determine whether the catastrophe had been orchestrated deliberately. Preliminary evidence suggested coordinated intrusions may have accompanied the cascading failures, raising the terrifying possibility that the blackout was not an accident at all but the opening phase of a far larger attack against the nation’s infrastructure backbone.

By afternoon, Americans flooded supermarkets and pharmacies with growing desperation as electronic payment systems failed nationwide. Customers stripped shelves of bottled water, batteries, canned food, fuel containers, infant formula, and medicine with astonishing speed. The architecture of abundance that had defined consumer society for generations began collapsing within hours once the electrical systems sustaining it ceased functioning. Refrigeration units warmed steadily while digital inventory systems went dark. Employees abandoned stores to protect their own families as arguments over supplies escalated into violence.

As evening descended, modern America encountered a darkness few citizens had ever witnessed. Entire metropolitan skylines vanished beneath an abyssal blackness untouched by neon signs, office towers, streetlights, or suburban floodlamps. The silence unsettled people almost as much as the darkness itself. Highways once overflowing with traffic stood eerily still while apartment towers loomed above silent streets like abandoned monoliths from a dead civilization. Only the distant wail of sirens, scattered gunfire, and the glow of isolated fires disturbed the unnatural stillness spreading across the land.

The Second Day - The Unraveling of Ordinary Life: Morning arrived carrying no reassurance. Power remained absent across enormous portions of the country while communication networks continued deteriorating. Refrigerators leaked onto kitchen floors. Fuel stations remained dead. Emergency broadcasts urged calm, yet the tone of official statements had already begun changing from confident reassurance to carefully managed uncertainty.

The second day shattered the illusion that the crisis would resolve quickly. Hospitals entered a state of escalating catastrophe as backup generators consumed fuel reserves far faster than administrators had projected. Emergency rooms overflowed with patients suffering dehydration, respiratory distress, panic attacks, untreated injuries, and complications from interrupted medical treatments. Pharmacies could no longer verify prescriptions because insurance databases and digital medical records were inaccessible. Families carrying diabetic children moved frantically between medical centers searching for refrigeration options before insulin supplies spoiled completely. Dialysis facilities in several states shut their doors entirely, effectively condemning thousands of patients once dependent upon routine treatment to slow and unavoidable deaths.

Meanwhile, another crisis was spreading quietly beneath the surface of public attention. Municipal water systems had begun failing in sequence across the country. Most citizens rarely considered the immense electrical infrastructure required to deliver clean water continuously into homes, apartment towers, hospitals, and businesses. Giant pumping stations moved billions of gallons every day through treatment facilities and pressure systems that now operated sporadically or not at all. Faucets sputtered weakly in some neighborhoods while others lost water entirely. Officials issued emergency boil-water advisories despite the growing reality that countless households no longer possessed reliable ways to heat water safely.

The psychological atmosphere across the country darkened visibly by nightfall. Looting erupted in several urban districts after sunset as small groups smashed storefronts searching for batteries, alcohol, medicine, generators, and food. Police departments attempted aggressive responses initially, but manpower shortages, fuel scarcity, and communication failures rapidly weakened operational effectiveness. Officers found themselves trapped inside the same unraveling crisis consuming the rest of society, worried not only about maintaining order but also about the safety of their own families.

The first unmistakable signs of decomposition had begun appearing within major cities. Spoiled food rotted inside powerless warehouses, supermarkets, restaurants, and suburban kitchens simultaneously. Garbage collection systems stopped functioning. Sewage pumping stations began failing under mounting pressure. The odor drifting through urban streets became heavier and more nauseating with each passing hour as sanitation systems quietly collapsed beneath the weight of the blackout.

By the end of the second night, many Americans experienced a realization more terrifying than the outage itself: the systems they had trusted all their lives were neither immortal nor invulnerable. Civilization, once perceived as permanent, suddenly appeared alarmingly fragile.

The Third Through Fifth Days - The Rot Beneath the Republic: The third morning marked the beginning of widespread panic.

Distribution centers could no longer function without electricity, digital logistics, or stable fuel deliveries. Freight systems stalled across the country while trucks sat immobilized beside empty highways because refineries, pumping stations, and communication infrastructure had all collapsed together. Americans discovered with growing horror that most supermarkets carried only a few days’ worth of inventory under normal conditions. Once panic buying consumed those reserves, nothing remained behind the shelves.

Suburban neighborhoods transformed almost overnight into armed enclaves gripped by suspicion and fear. Residents organized patrols after reports of burglaries and violent home invasions spread through fragmented radio broadcasts and word of mouth. Firearms disappeared from store inventories wherever transactions remained possible while ammunition became more valuable than cash in many regions.

Inside major cities, darkness itself became dangerous. Without streetlights, illuminated buildings, or functioning transportation systems, urban centers transformed after sunset into vast labyrinths of shadow illuminated only by scattered fires and flashlight beams. Criminal organizations adapted to the collapse with terrifying speed. Pharmacies were raided systematically. Supply convoys transporting medicine or emergency food were ambushed before reaching shelters. Entire neighborhoods fell under the control of armed groups after local law enforcement effectively ceased functioning there.

Behind closed doors in emergency command facilities, utility engineers delivered assessments so catastrophic many officials initially refused to accept them. Several critical transformers had suffered irreversible destruction. These colossal machines could not simply be replaced from nearby warehouses because many required specialized manufacturing timelines measured not in days, but in months or even years. The horrifying realization spreading through federal agencies was that the blackout might evolve into a prolonged national collapse rather than a temporary infrastructure emergency.

By the fourth and fifth days, money itself had begun losing practical meaning. Banks remained closed. Electronic transactions were impossible. Debit cards, retirement accounts, investment portfolios, cryptocurrencies, and digital banking systems became inaccessible abstractions trapped inside powerless networks. Millions who had considered themselves financially secure only days earlier suddenly discovered they could not purchase fuel, food, medicine, or transportation regardless of how much wealth technically existed in their accounts.

Several developments during this phase accelerated the national breakdown dramatically:

1. Fuel distribution networks ceased functioning almost entirely, immobilizing emergency vehicles, freight systems, and civilian transportation simultaneously.

2. Hospital generators began failing under continuous operational stress, forcing medical personnel into catastrophic triage conditions unlike anything seen in modern American history.

3. Municipal sanitation systems collapsed across multiple metropolitan regions, creating ideal conditions for disease outbreaks.

4. Refugee movements intensified as urban populations fled toward rural areas, overwhelming small communities already struggling with dwindling resources.

5. Public trust in federal authority deteriorated rapidly after repeated promises of imminent restoration failed to materialize.
The refugee crisis expanded with alarming speed. Families abandoned major cities carrying backpacks, bicycles, children, and improvised carts filled with scavenged supplies. Highways became graveyards of stalled vehicles after gasoline vanished from entire regions. Rural communities reacted with mounting hostility toward incoming outsiders, fearing desperate urban populations would consume already limited resources. Trust between strangers dissolved rapidly. The social fabric holding the nation together had begun tearing apart at every seam.

The Sixth and Seventh Days - The Black Sabbath of the Nation: By the sixth day, the healthcare system had descended into visible collapse. Hospital generators overheated or exhausted their remaining fuel reserves one after another. Intensive care units lost climate control while refrigerated medications spoiled in darkened storage rooms. Ventilator-dependent patients died in increasing numbers as exhausted nurses and doctors struggled beneath battery lanterns to maintain even the most basic forms of treatment. Ambulance systems deteriorated rapidly because emergency vehicles could no longer refuel consistently. Families transported injured relatives using bicycles, makeshift stretchers, shopping carts, and bare hands.

The emotional trauma inflicted upon medical personnel during this period became almost impossible to measure. Physicians trained to preserve life suddenly found themselves operating inside institutions stripped of medicine, electricity, sanitation, refrigeration, communication, and hope. Crowds gathered outside hospitals demanding antibiotics, painkillers, oxygen, or treatment while frightened staff attempted to maintain order inside buildings increasingly resembling war zones.

Disease spread quickly through overcrowded shelters and apartment complexes where sanitation systems had failed completely. Contaminated water triggered severe gastrointestinal outbreaks while spoiled food poisoned thousands already weakened by dehydration and stress. Mosquito populations exploded near stagnant floodwater and untreated sewage basins. Funeral homes ceased functioning almost immediately after refrigeration systems failed, forcing authorities to establish temporary body storage sites behind schools, churches, hospitals, and emergency centers.

One week after the collapse began, the United States no longer resembled the nation that had existed only days earlier. Entire metropolitan regions operated beneath continuous darkness while fires burned unchecked across abandoned districts where firefighting infrastructure had collapsed alongside municipal water pressure. Smoke drifted permanently above city skylines. Helicopters occasionally crossed the night sky transporting military personnel or emergency officials, but for ordinary citizens the sensation of abandonment became overwhelming.

Food shortages intensified relentlessly. Parents skipped meals so children could consume the final remnants of canned goods and scavenged supplies. Elderly residents died alone inside powerless apartments where nobody remained to check on them anymore. Packs of abandoned animals roamed through silent suburbs after owners either fled or succumbed to illness, starvation, or violence.

Police departments across the country deteriorated beneath exhaustion, desertion, fuel shortages, and communication failures. Some officers abandoned their posts entirely to protect their own families while others continued operating in fragmented units focused solely on defending strategic infrastructure and government compounds. Neighborhoods militarized themselves with barricades constructed from abandoned vehicles while armed civilians patrolled through the darkness carrying hunting rifles and improvised weapons.

The old assumptions sustaining modern life had vanished completely by the end of that first terrible week. The blackout was no longer perceived as a disaster from which recovery would naturally follow. It had become something far more disturbing: the slow and visible disintegration of the civilization itself.

Across large sections of the country, trust in federal authority had already begun disintegrating completely by the end of the second week. Emergency broadcasts continued appearing sporadically over battery radios, but the language coming from Washington had grown increasingly detached from the reality unfolding inside the streets of collapsing cities. Officials still spoke of “stabilization efforts” and “temporary infrastructure disruptions” while millions of Americans were already living without clean water, functioning hospitals, refrigeration, fuel, medicine, sanitation, or reliable food access. The distance between official rhetoric and lived reality created a bitterness that spread faster than the blackout itself.

In many metropolitan regions, nighttime became synonymous with terror. Once the sun disappeared beyond the horizon, entire districts transformed into hunting grounds where armed groups moved through darkened streets searching for supplies, medicine, generators, batteries, or vulnerable homes. Apartment complexes that had once housed middle-class families descended into violent internal conflicts after residents realized no outside assistance was coming. In some buildings, tenants barricaded entrances together and organized rotating night watches. In others, people abandoned entire floors after fires, assaults, or outbreaks of disease spread through cramped hallways and powerless ventilation systems.

The collapse of sanitation infrastructure accelerated conditions toward something resembling medieval plague environments. Sewage overflowed into intersections after pumping stations failed completely, contaminating groundwater and attracting enormous infestations of insects and rats. Rivers surrounding major cities filled with untreated waste while desperate civilians gathered water from the same contaminated sources because municipal supplies had vanished days earlier. Dysentery, severe gastrointestinal infections, dehydration, and respiratory illness spread through shelters with terrifying speed. Medical experts who still retained communication with emergency authorities warned that the country was entering the early stages of a full-scale humanitarian extinction event.
The refugee columns moving out of major cities grew larger with every passing day. Long lines of civilians stretched for miles along highways littered with stalled vehicles and burned transport trucks. Families pushed children through freezing rain beneath improvised blankets while carrying the final remnants of their possessions in shopping carts and backpacks. Some believed rural farmland would offer safety and food. Others simply fled because remaining inside the cities felt increasingly suicidal. Yet the countryside had already begun changing as well. Small towns armed themselves aggressively after reports spread of looting raids carried out by starving migrants. Makeshift checkpoints appeared outside farming communities where armed civilians interrogated strangers before allowing passage. In several states, violent clashes erupted after refugee groups attempted to force entry into isolated towns guarding wells, grain silos, livestock, or fuel reserves.

The collapse of fuel infrastructure had by now crippled nearly every remaining layer of organized response. Military convoys struggled to maintain transportation routes because diesel supplies were disappearing nationwide. Emergency helicopters flew less frequently. Police departments abandoned entire districts they no longer possessed the manpower or gasoline to patrol. Freight rail systems remained frozen while shipping ports stood silent beneath rusting cranes and powerless loading systems. America’s enormous industrial machine had not merely stalled; it had begun decomposing in place.

Several realities became unmistakably clear during this stage of the collapse:

1. The national food reserve was effectively exhausted in most populated regions, forcing millions into direct competition over whatever resources remained locally available.

2. The healthcare system no longer functioned as a national institution, existing only in fragmented pockets around surviving generators, military compounds, or improvised clinics.

3. Large urban centers were becoming structurally uninhabitable, particularly high-density districts dependent upon elevators, water pressure systems, refrigeration, and electronic logistics.

4. Armed territorial groups had begun replacing local government authority in several neighborhoods, suburbs, and transportation corridors.

5. The possibility of restoring the electrical grid quickly was rapidly disappearing, especially after engineers confirmed extensive transformer destruction across multiple regions.

Inside government facilities protected by military security, analysts quietly discussed mortality projections so catastrophic they bordered on incomprehensible. Under prolonged grid failure conditions, deaths from starvation, disease, exposure, untreated medical conditions, dehydration, and violence were expected to rise exponentially once existing food reserves vanished entirely. Some emergency models projected that if restoration failed for several months, casualty levels could eventually surpass anything seen in modern American history.

Winter weather moving across northern states deepened the crisis even further. Without heating systems, millions faced lethal exposure risks inside powerless homes and apartment towers. Families burned furniture, books, flooring, and scraps of construction material inside improvised stoves to survive freezing nights. Carbon monoxide poisoning surged after desperate residents attempted indoor fires without ventilation. Entire neighborhoods sat dark beneath snow while bodies accumulated silently inside buildings nobody had the resources to search anymore.

The emotional collapse of society became visible everywhere. People no longer spoke about careers, politics, entertainment, technology, or future plans. Conversation narrowed toward primitive necessities: water, calories, antibiotics, ammunition, shelter, warmth. Parents stared at starving children with expressions of helplessness that survivors later described as more haunting than the violence itself. Elderly citizens increasingly volunteered to eat less so younger family members might survive longer. Across countless homes, Americans experienced the horrifying realization that civilization had never truly disappeared from history; it had merely been waiting beneath the surface for the systems sustaining modern life to fail.

The third week arrived beneath a sky permanently stained by smoke. From the outskirts of major cities, enormous black columns drifted upward day and night where industrial fires, burning neighborhoods, collapsed fuel depots, and abandoned vehicles continued smoldering without interruption. In many regions, sunlight itself appeared dimmer through the haze, casting a sickly copper glow across silent highways and darkened suburbs. Survivors who later described those weeks often spoke less about the violence and more about the atmosphere, the overwhelming sensation that the world itself had become diseased.

Inside the great urban centers, starvation began reshaping human behavior with terrifying speed. During the first days of the blackout, people still retained fragments of ordinary morality. By the third week, hunger had hollowed out much of what remained. Entire apartment blocks were abandoned after residents exhausted every edible resource inside them. Families moved through dead neighborhoods carrying crowbars and flashlights, searching empty homes for canned goods, bottled water, pet food, batteries, medicine, or anything that might prolong survival another few days. Supermarkets had long since been stripped bare, leaving only shattered glass, overturned shelving, and the sour odor of decay lingering beneath the darkness.

The streets themselves began changing appearance. Garbage mountains accumulated beside intersections because sanitation services had vanished completely. Rotting food, sewage overflow, dead animals, and human remains created an almost unbearable stench in many districts, particularly during warmer afternoons when heat settled over the cities like a suffocating blanket. Rats multiplied in extraordinary numbers. Packs of abandoned dogs roamed through suburbs once considered among the safest communities in America. Windows remained shattered across entire commercial districts where looters had torn through pharmacies, electronics stores, warehouses, and grocery outlets during the opening weeks of panic.
The collapse of communication transformed fear into something even more dangerous. Without reliable information, rumors evolved into a kind of social contagion spreading faster than disease itself. Stories circulated about military evacuation zones reserved only for politicians and wealthy elites. Others claimed foreign troops had landed on American soil while the government concealed the truth. In refugee camps and overcrowded shelters, terrified civilians whispered about entire towns being massacred for food supplies or quarantine zones where infected populations had allegedly been abandoned behind barricades. Whether the stories were true mattered less than the effect they produced. Paranoia became as common as hunger.

Along the highways leading away from major cities, enormous caravans of displaced civilians continued moving through the ruins of the country. Some traveled on bicycles while others pushed shopping carts filled with blankets, cooking pots, medicine, or exhausted children wrapped in coats against the cold. Many no longer knew where they were heading. They simply moved because remaining still felt like surrendering to death. Entire families slept beneath overpasses, inside abandoned vehicles, or in the hollow shells of gas stations stripped long ago by looters. At night, campfires flickered across the interstate system like scattered signals from a civilization that had fallen backward centuries in only a matter of weeks.

Rural America had become deeply hostile by this stage of the collapse. Farming communities armed themselves heavily after repeated raids carried out by starving migrants desperate for grain silos, livestock, fuel, or wells. Makeshift militias patrolled county roads wearing hunting gear and carrying military rifles scavenged from sporting stores or private collections. In some areas, local churches became centers of organized survival where food was rationed carefully beneath armed guard. In others, authority belonged entirely to whoever possessed the most weapons and the willingness to use them.

The winter that followed became one of the deadliest periods in modern American history. Without functioning electrical grids, millions lost access to heating entirely. Apartment towers turned into frozen concrete tombs where elderly residents died silently beneath blankets inside darkened rooms. Families burned furniture, floorboards, books, fences, and scraps of insulation in desperate attempts to stay warm through the nights. Carbon monoxide poisoning killed thousands after improvised indoor fires filled powerless homes with toxic smoke. Entire neighborhoods disappeared beneath snow without a single visible light anywhere on the horizon.

Hospitals by now existed only in fragments. A handful of military facilities and isolated emergency compounds still operated generators, but most medical centers had become abandoned ruins filled with spoiled equipment, shattered windows, and empty corridors echoing beneath emergency lanterns. Survivable injuries once considered minor now carried death sentences. A simple infection, untreated pneumonia, dehydration, or contaminated water could kill within days. Pregnant women died during childbirth in apartments lit only by candles. Diabetics perished quietly once insulin vanished. The elderly disappeared in enormous numbers, followed closely by the very young.

The dead accumulated so rapidly in some regions that authorities stopped attempting formal burials altogether. Bulldozers dug enormous trenches outside major cities where bodies wrapped in blankets or plastic sheets were deposited in silence. In many places, nobody even recorded names anymore. Entire families vanished without documentation. Suburbs once associated with comfort and stability became ghost landscapes filled with abandoned vehicles, shattered homes, and drifting snow blowing through silent streets.

Perhaps the most horrifying transformation was psychological rather than physical. Civilization had always provided the illusion that humanity had evolved beyond its oldest instincts, yet prolonged collapse stripped those illusions away layer by layer. People no longer spoke about the future because the future itself had become unimaginable. The language of ordinary life disappeared. There were no conversations about careers, entertainment, technology, politics, or ambition anymore. Every thought revolved around heat, water, calories, shelter, and survival. Parents looked at starving children with expressions survivors would later describe as permanently haunting. Elderly relatives quietly refused food so younger family members might survive longer. Entire moral frameworks collapsed beneath the pressure of fear and deprivation.

By the fourth month, enormous portions of the United States had effectively ceased functioning as organized civilization. The federal government still existed technically, protected inside hardened facilities guarded by military units, but outside those isolated compounds America had fractured into disconnected islands of survival surrounded by vast regions of ruin. Some communities adapted through cooperation, strict rationing, agriculture, and armed defense. Others descended into predatory violence, raiding neighboring settlements for medicine, food, livestock, or fuel.

At night, the continent looked almost prehistoric from the sky. Satellite imagery reportedly showed a North America consumed by darkness, interrupted only by isolated military installations, scattered fires, and faint clusters of generator light surrounding hardened compounds. The glittering electric web that had once illuminated the most powerful nation on earth had vanished almost completely. Cities that once glowed so brightly they were visible from orbit had become black scars against the frozen land.

And beneath that immense darkness, among the ruins of highways, silent suburbs, dead factories, and abandoned towers, survivors slowly began understanding the final truth of the catastrophe. The grid had not merely powered modern civilization. It had been civilization. Once the electricity vanished long enough, everything built upon it vanished as well, revealing how frighteningly thin the barrier had always been between order and collapse."

"Israel Has 24 Hours Left: Russia Rushes 300 Warplanes to Iran as U.S. Air Superiority Faces Collapse"

Index AG, 5/26/26
"Israel Has 24 Hours Left: Russia Rushes 300 Warplanes
 to Iran as U.S. Air Superiority Faces Collapse"

"The 40-year era of American and Israeli air dominance in the Middle East officially ended tonight at 7:23 PM. In this deep-dive military analysis, we break down the seismic shift in regional power triggered by the massive arrival of 300 frontline Russian combat aircraft at Shahid Nojeh Air Base in Iran. This wasn’t just a delivery; it was a surgical invalidation of the fundamental assumption that has governed every Western military operation since 1967. Why the 24-Hour Clock is Ticking: Right now, in an underground command center in Tel Aviv, a countdown is underway. Israel faces its most consequential strategic decision in decades: strike now while the aircraft are being integrated, or allow the window to close and accept a permanent shift in the regional air balance. We explain the technical reality of “operational integration” and why the next 24 hours will define the next 30 years of warfare.

The Triple Threat: Su-35, Su-34, and MiG-31BM This isn’t export-grade junk. Russia has transferred its most lethal hardware: Su-35S: The air superiority titan designed to hunt F-35s and F-15s. Su-34: The supersonic “sledgehammer” that puts every U.S. base and naval asset in the Gulf in the crosshairs. MiG-31BM: The ultra-high-speed interceptor that turns the Persian Gulf into a “no-go zone” for U.S. AWACS and reconnaissance planes.

Inside the “Escalation Trap”: We analyze why Washington remained paralyzed during the 72-hour transfer window. By embedding Russian pilots and technical advisors on the ground, Moscow has created a “human shield” that forces the U.S. to choose between accepting the loss of air superiority or risking a direct nuclear escalation with Russia. This is the new “American containment methodology” being perfected in real-time - a template that Beijing is already studying for application in the Pacific. 

The Middle East air balance hasn’t just been degraded - it has been nullified. Watch to the end to understand the methodology Russia is using to dismantle U.S. military capability without firing a single shot, and what the “Pacific Variant” of this strategy looks like for the South China Sea." 
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Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Gerald Celente, "Two Warmongers Are Destroying The Global Economy

Very strong language alert!
Gerald Celente, 5/26/26
"Two Warmongers Are Destroying The Global Economy 
And We The People Are Paying The Price"
"Energy prices are surging. Inflation is squeezing households. Markets are unstable. And behind it all - escalating wars that show no signs of ending. As the conflicts in Iran, Ukraine, Gaza, and beyond intensify, the economic pain is hitting every corner of the globe. Eight billion people are footing the bill… while those in power push forward unchecked." 
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Musical Interlude: Alan Parsons Project, “Ammonia Avenue”

Full screen recommended.
Alan Parsons Project, “Ammonia Avenue”

"A Look to the Heavens"

“Globular clusters once ruled the Milky Way. Back in the old days, back when our Galaxy first formed, perhaps thousands of globular clusters roamed our Galaxy. Today, there are less than 200 left. Many globular clusters were destroyed over the eons by repeated fateful encounters with each other or the Galactic center. Surviving relics are older than any Earth fossil, older than any other structures in our Galaxy, and limit the universe itself in raw age.
There are few, if any, young globular clusters in our Milky Way Galaxy because conditions are not ripe for more to form. Pictured above by the Hubble Space Telescope are about 100,000 of M72's stars. M72, which spans about 50 light years and lies about 50,000 light years away, can be seen with a small telescope toward the constellation of the Water Bearer (Aquarius).”

"It Is Inevitable..."

“We do not rest satisfied with the present. We anticipate the future as too slow in coming, as if in order to hasten its course; or we recall the past, to stop its too rapid flight. So imprudent are we that we wander in the times which are not ours and do not think of the only one which belongs to us; and so idle are we that we dream of those times which are no more and thoughtlessly overlook that which alone exists. For the present is generally painful to us. We conceal it from our sight, because it troubles us; and, if it be delightful to us, we regret to see it pass away. We try to sustain it by the future and think of arranging matters which are not in our power, for a time which we have no certainty of reaching.

Let each one examine his thoughts, and he will find them all occupied with the past and the future. We scarcely ever think of the present; and if we think of it, it is only to take light from it to arrange the future. The present is never our end. The past and the present are our means; the future alone is our end. So we never live, but we hope to live; and, as we are always preparing to be happy, it is inevitable we should never be so.”
- Blaise Pascal

Jeremiah Babe, "It's All About Economic Survival"

Jeremiah Babe, 5/26/26
"It's All About Economic Survival"
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"Americans Feel Trapped, The Lies You’re Not Supposed To Know"

Full screen recommended.
Snyder Reports, 5/26/26
"Americans Feel Trapped, 
The Lies You’re Not Supposed To Know"
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The Daily "Near You?"

Port-of-Spain, Port-of-Spain, Trinidad and Tobago
Thanks for stopping by!

Delta Blues Brother, "Kind People Carry the Heaviest Scars"

Full screen recommended.
Delta Blues Brother,
"Kind People Carry the Heaviest Scars"

"Nine Important Facts"

 

"Our Task..."

“We have not overcome our condition, and yet we know it better. We know that we live in contradiction, but we also know that we must refuse this contradiction and do what is needed to reduce it. Our task as humans is to find the few principles that will calm the infinite anguish of free souls. We must mend what has been torn apart, make justice imaginable again in a world so obviously unjust, give happiness a meaning once more to peoples poisoned by the misery of the century. Naturally, it is a superhuman task. But superhuman is the term for tasks we take a long time to accomplish, that’s all.

Let us know our aims then, holding fast to the mind, even if force puts on a thoughtful or a comfortable face in order to seduce us. The first thing is not to despair. Let us not listen too much to those who proclaim that the world is at an end. Civilizations do not die so easily, and even if our world were to collapse, it would not have been the first. It is indeed true that we live in tragic times. But too many people confuse tragedy with despair. “Tragedy,” D.H. Lawrence said, “ought to be a great kick at misery.” This is a healthy and immediately applicable thought. There are many things today deserving such a kick.”
- Albert Camus

"How It Really Is"

 

Greg Hunter, "Transhumanism Sacrificing Life for Innovation"

"Transhumanism Sacrificing Life for Innovation"
by Greg Hunter’s USAWathchdog.com

"Karen Kingston is a biotech analyst, former Pfizer employee and one of the very first to warn people about the dangers of the CV19 bioweapon vaccines. Nearly five years ago, she called the CV19 injections “poison.” She was 100% correct!!! The industry does not want the CV19 injections pulled off the market even though they are hands down, scientifically proven, deadly and debilitating. Kingston says, “The Covid 19 injections are not vaccines. They can only cause disease, disability and death. They contain advanced medical technology, which are self-assembling, self-replicating synthetic life. That is why the CV19 shots are not being pulled off the market. Klaus Schawb from the World Economic Forum stated the fourth industrial revolution is not going to change what you are doing. It is going to change who you are. It changes you. . .. 

The US Government, Pentagon, Military and HHS have created synthetic life. Synthetic life is included in the mRNA nanoparticle CV19 technology. Synthetic life has no biologics in it anymore. This is polyurethane, plastics and metals that are self-replicating. It’s the graphene oxide (or gene editing technology). A top doctor was on Glenn Beck and stated this is not conspiracy theory. We all know there is a transhumanism agenda. Transhumanism is merging human life with technology and artificial intelligence (AI) and with genetics and DNA that are nonhuman life for the purposes of augmenting a human being. The same reason why the AI centers are going up all over our country, and AI is being integrated into Health and Human Services and AI integrated into our financial services, is the same reason why the mRNA (Covid vax) injections and mRNA technology is not being pulled off the market. It is all part of the transhumanism movement.”

Kingston brings up what Jesus said in Mark 13:20, Jesus said, “If the Lord had not cut short those days, no one would survive. But for the sake of the elect, whom he has chosen, he has shortened them.” Kingston goes on to explain, “This is technology that is merging with all of God’s creations. So, none of God’s creations will be left if God does not intervene. This is a battle between good and evil. This is a battle for humanity. Our bodies are vessels for the Holy Spirit and through our belief in our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, we have a connection to God. I believe this transhumanism, mRNA technology and constant bombarding of electromagnetic frequencies or the nanoparticle technology within your body sending signals, the whole point is to disconnect our connection to God. That is the purpose. Once you are disconnected from God, what do you have? You are out of love, out of connection to faith, hope and for lack of a better word, courage. I think people will end up in a state of fear.  People sometimes do very terrible things when they are afraid. The reason why the mRNA technology is not being stopped is because this is a battle for transhumanism.”

The CDC had a meeting in September of last year. Dr. Ratsef Levi said, “’I Hope That We All Can Agree That There’s a Problem Here.” Of course, the “problem” was the millions of deaths and injuries caused by the CV19 so-called vaccines. Kingston wrote a Substack about it and covered how they were going to come clean on the extreme dangers of the CV19 shots. Trade groups and industry killed any talk of actual informed consent or discussion of the high risks involved with the CV19 shots. The shots are simply NOT safe and NOT effective, but why do they stay on the market? The thinking is pure evil as Kingston explains, “They are basically saying we have to abandon safety for the sake of innovation. That’s what Peter Marks (former FDA vaccine regulator) said too, we have to get rid of safety. Just because children are dying in clinical trials does not mean we should not grant them FDA approval. We need to move forward with innovation, and what is innovation? It’s gene editing technologies. What does it mean to say ‘abandoning safety for innovation’? It means sacrificing human life and children’s lives for the sake of the bio-pharma medical industrial complex. It is for the sake of generating revenue  for illegal human experimentation for this whole transhumanism agenda.” There is much more in the 75-minute in-depth interview.

Join Greg Hunter on Rumble as he goes one-on-one with renowned biotech analyst Karen Kingston as she uncovers the truth about the pure evil transhumanism coming our way. The CV19 vax was NEVER “safe and effective.” The CV19 vax is a total fraud and crime on the public that is still killing and injuring millions worldwide.

"What Do They Have Planned? Scientists Are Projecting That The Population Of The World Could Fall By 50 Percent By 2064"

by Michael Snyder

"The global elite have been warning about overpopulation for a long time. Many of them are convinced that humanity is the greatest environmental threat that our planet faces, and so they believe that dramatically reducing the number of people walking around should be a top priority. A number of very twisted measures have been implemented in an effort to advance that agenda, but the population of the globe has continued to grow. Needless to say, this has greatly frustrated population control advocates. The things that they have been doing are not working fast enough, and there are some that are pushing for more extreme measures.

Getting rid of large numbers of people is not easy, but scientists at the University of Milan are projecting that we could see a massive population shift during the years ahead. In fact, they are claiming that the population of the world could fall by 50 percent by the year 2064… "Earth’s population currently sits at 8.3 billion people – but it could crash within the next 40 years, experts have warned. Scientists say that, in a worst–case scenario, humanity could potentially be halved by the year 2064."

Could you imagine 4 billion people being erased from the planet in less than 40 years? The researchers at the University of Milan are saying that their projections are based on a “deliberately conservative” worst case scenario…‘Under a deliberately conservative worst–case assumption that Earth’s sustainable carrying capacity suddenly dropped to around two billion people, our model predicts a rapid global population decline, with humanity potentially halving by around the year 2064.’ In order to hit the number that they are talking about, billions of people would have to die. Just think about that.

Ultimately, these researchers are envisioning a world with a “carrying capacity” of just two billion people…But in a ‘worst–case illustration’ Earth’s carrying capacity could plummet to just two billion, they warned. This would mean that the maximum number of people our planet could sustain indefinitely would be around a quarter of its current population. And, in turn, it would trigger a crash which could see the number of people on Earth halved.

So what are some things that could kill billions of people? As I detailed extensively in my last book, nuclear war and the nuclear winter that follows could kill billions of people. Widespread global famines could also achieve that goal, and it appears that widespread global famines are rapidly approaching. But perhaps the easiest way to kill billions of people would be a global pandemic with a very high death rate.

Right now, Bundibugyo virus is spreading like wildfire in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Unlike other forms of Ebola, there is no cure for Bundibugyo virus. We are being told that it has a death rate of between 25 and 50 percent, and so once you get it there is a very good chance that you will die. Some of the symptoms include fever, headache, nausea, abdominal pain, intense weakness, nosebleeds and vomiting blood.

A lot of people that didn’t take this outbreak seriously are starting to pay attention now that two suspected cases have popped up in Italy…TWO suspected Ebola cases have been detected in northern Italy in the past 24 hours, triggering a health alert. A man, 31, and a woman, 33, developed a high fever, nausea, vomiting and intestinal problems – symptoms of the deadly virus – after returning from Uganda. The cases concern a man from Bulgarograsso and a woman from Lurate Caccivio, had spent three months in the East African country working in humanitarian aid. Other members of their families were travelling with them, but it is still unclear if they are also presenting with any symptoms.

Hopefully authorities in Italy have isolated those two individual in time. Because it appears that this version of Bundibugyo virus spreads very easily. At this stage, we are being told that the outbreak in central Africa “is spreading faster than efforts to contain it”…The deadly outbreak of Ebola in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda is spreading faster than efforts to contain it, the World Health Organization warned Monday. WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said those responding to the epidemic were “playing catch-up” because of delays in detecting cases. Nobody has any idea how many people are actually infected. And more people are dropping dead with each passing day.

One official with the International Rescue Committee has ominously declared that “warning signs are flashing red”… “The initial failure to detect this outbreak has allowed it to spread to several areas of Ituri province in northeast DRC, where the first cases were identified, as well as to North Kivu (just to the south of Ituri) and South Kivu provinces, and now Uganda,” the International Rescue Committee, one of the aid groups on the ground, said in a report published on Tuesday.

With cases reported in key population centers such as Goma, the capital of North Kivu, and Kampala in Uganda, there is a significant risk of onward spread of the disease, the group assessed. “The warning signs are flashing red,” Bob Kitchen, vice president of emergencies for the group, said in a statement.

Global health authorities are openly admitting that they do not have this outbreak under control. And it certainly does not help that some victims have been running away from treatment centers…Health officials in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) have reported a disturbing new trend of patients fleeing from treatment centers when they come under attack from angry mobs – something that is happening with increasing frequency, as youths in the eastern Congo demand the remains of friends and family be handed over for funerals, in defiance of outbreak protocols.

When victims run back to their family and friends, they are just going to spread the disease to others. And in some cases, mobs of young people are actually attacking treatment centers… "First on Saturday and again on Sunday, residents of Mongbwalu town in the DRC attacked the Mongbwalu general referral hospital. Dr Richard Lokodu, medical director of the facility, told Reuters that 18 Ebola patients had fled on Saturday after “unidentified individuals” burned tents, erected by Médecins Sans Frontières, where patients were being isolated. The hospital came under four waves of attacks on Sunday, he added, by young people mobilized by relatives of a religious leader who died of Ebola. Seven other patients escaped and Congolese police and soldiers had to intervene to restore order."

This is an unmitigated disaster. Bundibugyo virus is going to spread all over the region, and perhaps that is what was intended. Can you imagine the panic that we will witness if this horrifying disease starts spreading in the United States?

Authorities have already ordered enhanced screening for anyone entering the U.S. from the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Uganda and South Sudan…"Officials in the US said on Friday that people returning to the US from the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Uganda and South Sudan would need to fly to one of three US airports for screenings: Washington Dulles International Airport near Washington, DC; Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport in Georgia; and George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston, Texas."

Bundibugyo virus is not supposed to transmit easily from person to person. But this version does. Healthcare workers that have taken extreme precautions are even catching it. We could potentially be just weeks away from a major global health scare. I will be watching this outbreak very closely, and I think that there is a lot more going on behind the scenes than we are being told."

"What Will Happen If Gas Hits $10 A Gallon?"

Full screen recommended.
Finance Economist, 5/26/26
"What Will Happen If Gas Hits $10 A Gallon?"
"Gas was $2.96 on February 26th. It’s $4.55 today. California is past $6. Diesel hit $8 in San Francisco. That’s a 54% increase in 87 days. And Wood Mackenzie says $200 oil is possible if the Strait stays closed. At $10 gas, you spend $10,000 a year on fuel. Your groceries double. Your electricity surges 30–50%. 10,000 trucking companies go under. Small businesses close by the tens of thousands. The suburbs stop functioning. And 40% of working Americans can no longer afford to drive to their jobs. A global risk firm just ranked the US the 3rd most likely country on Earth for civil unrest."
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Dan, I Allegedly, "America Is Financially Exhausted"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, I Allegedly, 5/26/26
"America Is Financially Exhausted"
"Americans are financially exhausted and Memorial Day may have exposed just how bad things have become. Household debt has surged to record levels, credit card balances are exploding, and millions of people are now borrowing money simply to survive. In this video, Dan from i Allegedly breaks down the growing financial stress facing everyday Americans, why inflation and high interest rates are crushing the middle class, and how retirees, workers, and families are all feeling the pressure at the same time.

This video covers the real economy that people are experiencing right now: rising grocery prices, out-of-control credit card debt, remote workers taking second jobs, student loan defaults, and the financial anxiety affecting workplaces across America. Dan also shares practical advice on how to build an emergency fund, reduce debt, and prepare financially before conditions potentially get even worse. If you’re worried about the economy, inflation, debt, layoffs, or the future of the middle class, this is a must-watch discussion."
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Monday, May 25, 2026

"Memorial Day, Lest We Forget"

"Memorial Day, Lest We Forget"
By John Kass

"We had some fine traditions in America, though many have been pushed aside because they get in the way of modern politics. And when it comes to patriotism on the days when we mourn our war dead, you can feel the media groaning. Patriots and patriarchs aren’t much appreciated these days. They’re now considered just too toxic, too masculine and they’re such a bother.

America once prized merit and competition. Now, though, we prize politics and our cultural institutions strive to make Beta males. There are unintended costs to all of this, including all those young men lost, boys adrift without fathers to guide them, lonely confused boys who rage in the anonymous shadows of social media. Add unfettered access to violent video games, unfettered access to internet porn, raised by mothers who resent the fathers who walked away, shaped by anger and social isolation.

Throw in the absence of a spiritual life and the absence of a common morality. Add guns. This stew of rage boils over into murder sprees, in rural areas, in urban centers. We ignore what we feel in our bones to be wrong. We’d rather play our politics instead.

Ultimately the day comes - and it always comes - when some other powerful nation that isn’t obsessed with creating Beta males shows up with its armies. They come to take all that you have and all that you’d ever dreamed of having. They come to take your food, your life, the lives of your children. Your spine. Your hope. Your identity. Everything. And then you don’t have a country. The landless descend into wandering barbarism. They become as beasts of no nation, because their nation is gone.

Don’t think it can’t happen. It happens. It has happened in many other ages. It happened to Thebes. That nation had destroyed the unstoppable superpower and military might of Sparta, but soon Thebes was itself destroyed, all the way down to the scattered, nameless stones, the people dead or sold off in the slave markets. And who and what they were was forgotten. All that was left were scratches on stones bleaching like bones in the sun.

History tells us these stories again and again, if we’d listen. History warns of what happens to nations that weaken themselves and abandon their own borders, prizing sensitivity and men without chests above virtue.

A culture becoming fragile is awash with tears, but it becomes dry, like pottery. It cracks. And as the ages forget the names, history smirks. When the people are threatened, with the people desperate and frightened, it is then that soldiers are appreciated, welcomed and needed. The armed forces, forming that thin line between civilization and chaos are honored for a time. Though eventually, if they’re successful in defense, they are inevitably forgotten, again. All soldiers throughout history have understood this dynamic, especially in free, prosperous nations like ours.

Our war dead didn’t risk or lose their lives to be praised and petted with flowery words. They knew they were led to slaughter by fine words from the double-tongues about great honor and great sacrifice. But they also knew this: They had a job to do, protecting our liberty and our nation with their bodies and blood. I suppose they hoped, as Americans, that we would live up to our half of the bargain and not dishonor the freedom they’d given to us, that was bought with their lives.

Traditions are an important means for a people trying to stave off cultural betrayal. This is why traditions are often targeted by agents of change. The old traditions remind us who we are, what we were, reminding us of our ideal selves, of virtue lost to time and what we call progress.

Memorial Day is when we mourn the fallen of the United States Armed Forces who died for our liberty. And because it is Memorial Day, not burger and beer day, not sports day, not play video games day, not chips and dip day, there is one tradition I hope we try our best to keep. It involves us taking time out to think hard and long about a soldier’s poem and the poppies, row on row.

“In Flanders Fields” is that soldier’s poem, written in World War I by Col. John McCrae, a man who’d seen the devastation of war, and hopelessness. Yet with clear eyes and a clean heart he wrote of poppy blossoms as rebirth of hope, those bright orange/red papery thin blossoms, as delicate as dreams, waving in the breeze over the freshly dug graves of the dead.

The scene was Ypres, Belgium at a farm converted to a military hospital, where McCrae was an Army doctor, doctor, dealing with pain and death and disease. Flanders Fields is particularly tragic. The political leadership had led their citizens into hell, and still the citizen soldiers marched toward death and the trenches and the barbed wire, and the gas.

My mother, 92 years old and born of the United Kingdom, hasn’t forgotten. She was born in Guelph, Ontario, the town where Col. McCrae is from. She knew his family. They all knew of the McCraes, but they did not treat them as celebrities. Instead, they respected them. My mom would put a book of his poetry on the breakfast table when my sons were little boys, so that we’d remember as we taught the boys. And that is how traditions are maintained.

And my friend Bill Gritsonis, a former soldier of the U.S. Army and member of the American Legion Hellenic Post 343 hasn’t forgotten. The entire American Legion hasn’t forgotten. The legion remembers the poem and the poppy, and members hand out poppies to help commemorate Memorial Day. “We’d hand out the poppies around City Hall,” he said. “Some of the veterans who survived are so very old. They’re still holding on. We have to do this for them, for us, for our kids, for our country. We just can’t forget.”

On this Memorial Day, when too many of us are thinking of grilling meat and drinking beer and staring at ballgames with sports announcer talking of the loss of a game as if it is death. American Legion posts and Veterans of Foreign Wars and many other groups will attend and participate in ceremonies of somber remembrance and mourning.

Some will be at parades in small towns. Or in quiet gatherings in cemeteries. They’ll bow their heads as a bugler plays “Taps” in a town square, or as the notes from the horns echo on the gravestones in great national cemeteries.

American Legion Hellenic Post 343 plans on being at Elmwood Cemetery, in River Grove, Il., as they have for years, since the 2011 dedication of the Hellenic American Veterans Memorial that honors Greeks who served. “This began way before my time, with others, the group as a whole, Hellenic Post 343 bought the land at Elmwood Cemetery, raised the funds,” Gritsonis said. “The Scouts remember. Our former commander, Anastasios “Steve” Betzelos, he’s 98 and a half. He’s going to try to make it.”
Gritsonis isn’t looking for a mention. He’s not like that. Once a top soldier, he doesn’t seek glory in the words of others. He’d rather that I write around his name. But he and other former U.S. Armed Service Personnel and those on active duty will remember. Why? Once you learn about Flanders Fields, once you read the poem, it sears. It is difficult to forget.

And perhaps because we all come from someplace else. We’re Americans. And whatever our ethnicity or creed, we’re bound together by the ideas that maintain our liberty. They’re written in the Constitution of the United States and The Bill of Rights added to the Constitution by wise and great men, that form a nation that is still the last, best hope of mankind on earth.

Some old soldiers will be asked about Col. McCrae’s poem and the poppies on the graves. I hope they’re asked about it. You might want to print this poem out, take it with you to the cemetery, or a parade, or a lonely grave. You might leave a copy of the poem on a picnic table, as others stuff their faces and guzzle beers without a thought of the Americans who gave everything for them. I don’t mean to shake it at them as if it’s some kind of dare. We’ve had too much of that on all sides.

Politicians and their angry mouthpieces are waging wars of words right now over what to do in the aftermath of mass shootings. The way they talk, they’re all about winning some kind of advantage, hoping to crush their political opponents. It’s as if their words were political tomahawks fashioned from the bones of the dead children from that school in Uvalde. The dead children become the pointed tips of their rhetorical spears.

And others wage wars of words over the war in Ukraine, the same voices that frightened the nation about those weapons of mass destruction that couldn’t be found in Iraq, the same voices that argued for that war. The same voices that assured us that Western-style democracy could be imposed on people with no idea or appreciation for our democratic traditions. These are same voices that told us not to worry about the rise of the American Surveillance State.

And all these barking dogs on all sides sound as if they have a deep faith, not in God, but in themselves, and their own special talents. The anonymous life on social media has left them unbound. They rage and become their own gods, and for as long as they keep barking, I suppose they feel they’ll never be held accountable. So the barking continues.

When “In Flanders Fields” was first published anonymously, in the English magazine “Punch” on Dec. 15, 1915, it seemed as there was a common purpose to our history. And then as now, the young wanted so desperately to live. It became an anthem. Here is John McCrea’s poem:
There have been other poems. But this, to me, to many of us, on this Memorial Day, when we mourn our war dead, is one of a kind. ‘Lest we forget."
"For the Fallen"
 
"With proud thanksgiving, a mother for her children,
England mourns for her dead across the sea.
Flesh of her flesh they were, spirit of her spirit,
Fallen in the cause of the free.

Solemn the drums thrill; Death august and royal 
Sings sorrow up into immortal spheres,
There is music in the midst of desolation
And a glory that shines upon our tears.

They went with songs to the battle, they were young,
Straight of limb, true of eye, steady and aglow.
They were staunch to the end against odds uncounted;
They fell with their faces to the foe.

They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old: 
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning
We will remember them.

They mingle not with their laughing comrades again; 
They sit no more at familiar tables of home;
They have no lot in our labour of the day-time;
They sleep beyond England's foam.

But where our desires are and our hopes profound, 
Felt as a well-spring that is hidden from sight,
To the innermost heart of their own land they are known
As the stars are known to the Night;

As the stars that shall be bright when we are dust, 
Moving in marches upon the heavenly plain;
As the stars that are starry in the time of our darkness, 
To the end, to the end, they remain."

- Laurence Binyon