Monday, May 3, 2021

"Economic Market Snapshot 5/3/21"

"Economic Market Snapshot 5/3/21"
"Capitalism is the astounding belief that the most wickedest of men will
do the most wickedest of things for the greatest good of everyone."
- John Maynard Keynes
"Down the rabbit hole of psychopathic greed and insanity...
Only the consequences are real - to you!
Your guide:
Gregory Mannarino, AM 5/3/21:

"UPDATES: Fed. "Digital Dollar," Inflation, 

Markets, Crypto, Gold, Silver, Crude. MORE!

"The more I see of the monied classes, 
the better I understand the guillotine."
- George Bernard Shaw
MarketWatch Market Summary, Live Updates

CNN Market Data:

CNN Fear And Greed Index:
A comprehensive, essential daily read.
May 2nd to May 4th, Updated Daily 
Financial Stress Index
"The OFR Financial Stress Index (OFR FSI) is a daily market-based snapshot of stress in global financial markets. It is constructed from 33 financial market variables, such as yield spreads, valuation measures, and interest rates. The OFR FSI is positive when stress levels are above average, and negative when stress levels are below average. The OFR FSI incorporates five categories of indicators: credit, equity valuation, funding, safe assets and volatility. The FSI shows stress contributions by three regions: United States, other advanced economies, and emerging markets."
Daily Job Cuts

"Insights into Risk: Taleb and Tyson"

"Insights into Risk: Taleb and Tyson"
by Charles Hugh Smith


"I see the same question in forums, threads, articles and emails: what can I do to protect myself and my family from whatever lies ahead? Given the uncertainties and extremes that are so evident, recognizing risk is a useful first step, a recognition that is very much out of fashion. If we glance at the charts of margin debt (loans taken against one's stock portfolio) which is at record highs, and short interest (bets that stocks will drop) which is at record lows, it seems the primary risk on investors' minds is FOMO (fear of missing out) of all the fat, juicy guaranteed gains just ahead.

For the few still asking about the source of risk, the general answer takes one of two paths: inflation leading to hyper-inflation or a deflationary collapse of defaults and popping asset bubbles. It's easy to find pundits arguing for one or the other, but do we have the initial conditions, variables and functions we need to solve this problem and get a clear answer, inflation or deflation?

Consider two variables that are rarely visible in pundits' arguments:
1) What will benefit the banks?
2) What will benefit the nation's place in the geopolitical pecking order?

The inflationary camp holds that the soaring debt, public and private, can only be serviced if incomes inflate so households, companies and governments have enough income to make the payments on their soaring debts. Since this is a self-reinforcing spiral - more inflation leads to more inflation - central banks will be forced to print their currencies into oblivion, i.e. hyper-inflation. If they ever stop printing, the house of cards (soaring debt) will collapse.

This logic seems sound enough, but once hyper-inflation takes off and people are earning $250,000 a month and a loaf of bread is $250, how will banks profit from households paying off their once-stupendous mortgage (that required 30 years of monthly payments to pay off) with a single month's pay?

Hyper-inflation will destroy not just the currency but the entire banking sector, which is politically powerful. Will the banks just sit by passively watching their wealth and income being destroyed by high inflation? One suspects they will use their political power to avoid being ground into dust by hyper-inflation. The banks would much prefer defaults that they can shift to the government (via bailouts) and deflation, where every monthly credit card/mortgage payment has greater purchasing power than the previous month.

Next, consider the consequences of hyper-inflation on the nation's currency: it loses virtually all its value in terms of buying food, oil, semiconductors, autos, etc. from other nations. Nobody will want to trade real goods for worthless dollars. Imports paid with dollars will plummet to zero in hyper-inflation. In terms of a nation's economic power, its currency is the foundation, because if the currency plummets to near-zero then everything denominated in that currency also loses value on the global stage.

A reserve currency - a national currency that is widely held globally because it it's expected to hold its value, and the market for everything denominated in that currency is extremely large and liquid--is the crown jewel of whatever nation (or entity, in the case of the EU) issues it. Who would benefit from the destruction of a nation's reserve currency? Virtually no one. The nation would be impoverished. So why is hyper-inflation - the destruction of the currency - so broadly accepted as inevitable?

It's also widely assumed that the Federal Reserve and other central banks control all the variables in setting bond yields, interest rates and inflation. But what if some variables are outside the Fed's control? What if their claim of controlling all variables is mere PR?

We also don't know what function inflation or deflation might manifest. Will it be arithmatic-- 1 + 1 = 2 + 1 = 3, etc.--or geometric-- 1 + 1 = 2 + 2 = 4 + 4 = 8 + 8 = 16?

This makes an enormous difference: arithmatic inflation is predictable - 5% a year, for example - but geometric increases lead to hyper-inflation and complete destabilization of the economy and society.

Very few pundits reckon the central banks and governments will choose default and deflation because these will be painful - but what could be more painful than wiping out the value of the currency?

If the wealthy elite own precious metals, farmland, manufacturing, government bonds, etc., then the default of zombie households and corporations (zombies defined as entities that have to borrow more to remain among the living), then why would they care? Corporate bondholders and marginal lenders would be destroyed, but again, the wealthy need only avoid owning marginal debt to avoid the debacle of default losses.

The politically powerful elites have their ace in the hole: they can demand politicians (who need their contributions to fund their re-election campaigns) bail out the banks, transferring the losses from defaults from private banks to the public sector, exactly what happened in 2008-09.

But once again, are the elites and government fully in control of all variables, or could they be assuming arithmatic functions when geometric functions might actually manifest? Deflationary defaults can destroy bank assets just as quickly as hyper-inflation, as once buyers vanish (markets go bidless) then the value of assets pledged as collateral plummets to levels no one believes possible. Entire highrise buildings are sold for the value of the elevator system. Yes, it happened in the Great Depression.

A little inflation or deflation is a good thing, manageable by the government and elite, but geometric inflation or deflation undermines the entire financial system, including the finances of governments and elites.

How do we calculate the probability and potential intensity of destabilizing social disorder? It's widely assumed that the U.S. could never experience the sort of massive, widespread social disorder that occurs in developing-world nations during crises. But humans are humans, and when put under pressure by high inflation / deflation and declining prosperity, people respond in ways that can very quickly escape the control of authorities. "Is a Cultural Revolution Brewing in America?"

If the consequential variables and functions are not measurable, then seemingly small disorders can spread throughout the entire society - or supply chain. Where does all this leave us? We know from studies of human psychology that humans don't feel comfortable with uncertainty and seek a haven of certainty as quickly as possible. They will cling to anchored beliefs in the face of conflicting evidence and strengthen their attachment to beliefs when challenged. We're wired for a decisive commitment to a belief structure.

Sustained indecision and ambiguity is uncomfortable. We want an answer, and if there isn't one, then we'll make one up or commit to an answer proposed by a pundit, even though that person has no better grasp of the initial conditions, variables and functions as anyone else.

Alternatively, if we can't possibly answer the question of what happens next, we have to accept that this era's uncertainties may not be resolvable. This is an exceedingly valuable insight, as if we embrace this uncertainty, we can avoid defaulting to a rigid, brittle false certitude that can only lead us astray if events don't follow the path we've committed to. In other words, we all want certainty, but this isn't possible because 1) the variables are invisible 2) the functions are unknown and 3) the "solution" (predicted path) depends entirely on the initial conditions, in which small changes completely change the outcome.

Faced with the knowledge that so-called fat tail risk (i.e. a geometric function replacing an arithmatic function, and small events triggering large consequences, i.e. non-linear dynamics) is real but unpredictable, then we're forced to think through these supposedly low-probability risks and devise a response that we can implement because we already thought it out.

This is the difference between having a pre-planned response and panic. Mike Tyson's memorable quote offers great insight into risk and uncertainty: "Everyone has a plan until they get punched in the mouth." The average person considers the odds of getting punched in the face as very low. The martial arts student doesn't follow the line of thinking that because the odds appear low, there is no need to learn self-defense. Rather, being prepared to defend oneself is a permanent state of readiness, perhaps rusty and imperfect, but there nonetheless.

Events that devastate the majority financially greatly enrich the few who bet on non-linear dynamics. This 2002 profile of Nassim Taleb by Malcolm Gladwell offers an enlightening perspective on this approach. "Blowing Up: How Nassim Taleb turned the inevitability of disaster into an investment strategy"

Very few of us can pursue Taleb's mathematically sophisticated strategies. But that doesn't mean we can't embrace uncertainty and fat-tail risks and think through responses in advance, and plan a hedging strategy that accounts for possibilities from 1) nothing changes to 2) everything changes.

We don't have to respond perfectly to be successful. We simply need to have prepared responses for contingencies from whatever we consider most likely to whatever we consider very unlikely but still possible. The point here is that embracing uncertainty means we accept that the market might still punch us in the face, and we might make mistakes or fail to perform as we'd hoped, but the process of planning layers of response may well help protect us from irreversible losses and bad decisions made in the chaos of fear and panic."

Sunday, May 2, 2021

"Fourth Stimulus Check Huge Monthly Checks! 4th Stimulus Check Update 2021 SSI SSDI"

LALATE, Evening 5/2/21: 
"Fourth Stimulus Check Huge Monthly Checks! 
4th Stimulus Check Update 2021 SSI SSDI"

"Housing Crash Is Ahead! As Lumber Prices Surged 340% Price Bubble Is Out Of Control"

Full screen recommended.
"Housing Crash Is Ahead! 
As Lumber Prices Surged 340% Price Bubble Is Out Of Control"
by Epic Economist

"The US housing market bubble is running out of control. A growing number of experts have been warning the Federal Reserve has been blowing the current price bubble by keeping mortgage rates at historically low levels, enabling prices to reach unprecedented highs. However, things are becoming increasingly unsustainable and the threat of a housing market crash of epic proportions is looming on the horizon.

The remarkable surge in home prices and household debt have deteriorated the Housing Affordability Index, which measures whether a typical family makes enough income to qualify for a mortgage loan on a typical home at the national and regional levels. The expanding gap between home prices and affordability is a clear sign that the housing market is in dangerous bubble territory, just as seen during the previous housing boom.

Housing data is reaching levels last seen in 2006, and industry experts are concerned about the impacts another housing bubble will have, particularly considering that 15 years ago the 2008 real estate bubble burst threatened the stability of the entire global financial system, and today we're experiencing the same levels of inflation, but a lot more money is flowing into the sector, which means the crash is bound to be much more extreme. Today's market is already creating major imbalances across several segments of the economy, and although this rally might look different from the last one, the market's principles remain the same.

That's what billionaire real estate investor Jeff Greene has recently argued in an interview with CNBC. Greene, who made a fortune shorting subprime mortgages more than a decade ago, said this is an "omni-bubble". When asked for how long this euphoria would last before a crash occurred, the investor said: "It depends. How long do you keep the faucet open and this money running?"

Greene believes the market is overheating right now and his previous bet against the housing market in the mid-2000s makes his comments quite notable. "When you see prices go up the way they've gone up, you have to ask yourself: Why did this happen?" he outlined. Americans have also been posing the same question and Google data show that in recent days, searches for "When is the housing market going to crash?" have dramatically increased.

In essence, consumers have been growing worried that the housing bubble may be ready to burst in face of skyrocketing prices and an exceedingly elevated demand. Google reported that the search question "When is the housing market going to crash?" had jumped 2,450% in the past month. "Why is the market so hot?" searches had doubled in just a week. And, in the most telling indication that the market bubble is running out of control, the question "How much over asking price should I offer on a home 2021" spiked 350% in that same week.

The U.S. has just a 3.6-month supply of homes - the lowest point on record. By the numbers, it’s becoming increasingly harder to deny that America’s housing market is overheating. Greene upholds that this is happening "80% because of the extraordinary amount of liquidity in the economy, 20% because of fundamentals". The investor also mentioned rising costs for lumber, suggesting a major inflationary spike will show up across several segments of the economy over the comings months.

The Federal Reserve's monetary policies have not only expanded the home price bubble but they have also created several other price bubbles due to rising inflation. Lumber prices portray that reality. In twelve months, prices spiked 340%, and new records are set almost on a daily basis. The surge in lumber costs added $35,872 to the price of an average new single-family home and $12,966 to the market value of an average new multifamily home, according to the NAHB. And this is just the beginning. "I think we're going to have inflation that no one is forecasting whatsoever, and it's going to have to lead to much higher interest rates and that is going to slow down all these markets," Greene warned.

The last time America’s housing industry looked like this, the Great Recession occurred, property values plummeted, a massive wave of foreclosures was registered, and Americans lost trillions of dollars of equity and retirement savings. Even though this time around the intrinsic supply and demand fundamentals might be different in part due to the effects of the health crisis, but the panic-buying and speculative exuberance look a lot like it did fifteen years ago. As we've crossed the bubble zone and consumers aren't keeping up with the pace of the home price appreciation, when the housing market finally crashes we will see our fragile post-outbreak economy falling again in a steep recession and we'll be lucky if a global financial crisis doesn't follow."

Must Watch! "Why Is Everything Closing? The Collapse Has Begun And Nothing Will Stop It; You Should Be Worried"

Full screen recommended.
Jeremiah Babe,
"Why Is Everything Closing? 
The Collapse Has Begun And Nothing Will Stop It; You Should Be Worried"

"Cruel Summer"

"Cruel Summer"
by The ZMan

"Way back when the Covid panic began, smart people pointed out that shutting down an economy was going to have unforeseen consequences. A modern economy is an incomprehensibly complex organism. Even turning off some parts of it for a short time will change the organism, resulting in downstream changes. It is why people who work with complex things are very careful about the changes they make. They accept that there is much about the system that they cannot known in advance.

Of course, the people in charge are sure they have it all figured out, so they just blundered ahead with their lock downs and new rules. Shutting down most of the restaurant industry and closing the schools. for example, radically altered the demand side of the food market. Suddenly, goods for the restaurant business had no demand, while demand for home products shot through the roof. This should have given them pause, but they kept blundering ahead with their schemes.

Anyone who has been in a grocery store of late knows that food prices are jumping like it is the 1970’s again. There are also weird shortages. Something like mayonnaise will disappear from the shelves for a week and then come back, but then plastic bags become scarce. The same phenomenon is happening with other things like building supplies and petroleum products. The official statistics are complete nonsense, so we have no idea how much food has jumped. It is enough that people are talking about inflation in private conversations for the first time in decades.

The usual suspects, of course, are spilling into the streets to chant about fiat currency, hyperinflation, and the rest of their stuff. It is as if the Great Pumpkin has finally risen out of the pumpkin patch. They have been waiting their whole lives for the Weimar moment foretold in the prophesies. Because these people are always wrong it is good to remember they are wrong now. The problem now is actually much worse than too much money chasing too few goods. It is systemic.

For starters, governments around the world have been taking sledgehammers to the global supply chain. These supply chains evolved over a long period of time to solve the problems of getting goods to the market. In response to Covid, government willy-nilly started turning things on and off without much thought. The system can respond to short term emergencies like natural disasters, but it was never equipped to respond to random outages imposed by people who have never had a job.

Then you have the stimulus plans. Having idled large swaths of the economy for periods, the same people frantically turning things on and off started pumping money into the retail side. At first this new money was absorbed in the system. Personal debt fell in 2020 as people got conservative in the face of the crisis. They also began to change their lives in response to the lockdowns. Going to the movies and out to eat is a habit, not a necessity. Lots of habits changed in 2020.

Labor markets have been radically changed by Covid and the efforts from the rulers to make a big show of dealing with it. Entry level jobs are now hard to fill, because unemployment still pays very well. If you are a restaurant opening for the first time in a year, finding help is difficult. It is not a shortage of labor as much as a shortage of people ready to go back to work. Labor shortages, however they are created, result in a spike in labor costs, which appear at the cash register.

Finally, we have monetary policy. Central bank policy has evolved over the last thirty years based on certain assumptions. Government policy, for example, has been predictable going back to the 1990’s. While there have been the usual problems, the global economy has settled into some predictable patterns. All of a sudden, none of this is true, so monetary policy has to adjust. Adjusting to erratic government behavior and unpredictable consequences in the economy is practically impossible.

The upshot to all of this is we are seeing real inflation for the first time in generations, but we have a variety of causes this time. In the 1970’s, it was too much money chasing too few goods. Pulling money out of the economy was painful, but it worked. This time, we have too much money in some areas, but we have broken supply chains and labor markets contributing to the problem. The Fed cannot do anything about shortages of aluminum cans or chicken farm with too few chickens.

To make matters worse, pulling money out of the system is probably not possible, given decades of ultra-low borrowing rates. The world has become so accustomed to low interest rates, it has become an axiom, like the changing of the seasons or the laws of thermodynamics. Any significant change in the money supply to combat retail inflation would send the financial markets into a tailspin. Housing would collapse if mortgage rates returned to anything resembling normal.

None of this means there is no answer. Often, the right answer is to do nothing and let things run their course. That was the right answer with Covid. As with Covid, the rulers cannot accept that answer, so they will thrash around some more. The people animating the corpse of Joe Biden are promising to smash things up some more for the greater good. After all, what matters to them is that we know the people in the mansions and castles really care about us, while they live like royalty.

The result of all this is we are heading into a cruel summer. The bill for the Covid response is coming due. How a society responds to crisis is the result of the social trust in that society. America is a low trust society now. Further, the people who will be counted on to dig out of the mess created by the rulers are now treated like second class citizens by those rulers. The fix to the 60’s and 70’s was to first repair the loss of faith in the system. It is hard to imagine that happening this time."

Musical Interlude: Medwyn Goodall, "Invocation Part 2"

Medwyn Goodall, "Invocation Part 2"

"A Look to the Heavens"

"If our Sun were part of this star cluster, the night sky would glow like a jewel box of bright stars. This cluster, known as M53 and cataloged as NGC 5024, is one of about 250 globular clusters that survive in our Galaxy. Most of the stars in M53 are older and redder than our Sun, but some enigmatic stars appear to be bluer and younger. These young stars might contradict the hypothesis that all the stars in M53 formed at nearly the same time. These unusual stars are known as blue stragglers and are unusually common in M53. After much debate, blue stragglers are now thought to be stars rejuvenated by fresh matter falling in from a binary star companion. 
By analyzing pictures of globular clusters like the featured image taken by the Hubble Space Telescope, astronomers use the abundance of stars like blue stragglers to help determine the age of the globular cluster and hence a limit on the age of the universe. M53, visible with a binoculars towards the constellation of Bernice's Hair (Coma Berenices), contains over 250,000 stars and is one of the furthest globulars from the center of our Galaxy."

“Hustled Through Life”

“Hustled Through Life”
by Paul Rosenberg

“Most people, sad to say, are too rushed, frightened, and confused to think about what they really want out of life. They are hustled through school, forced into long-term decisions before they’re ready to face them, then held to those decisions by fear and shame. They choose from a limited set of options, and they know that change will be punished. Eventually they get old and find time to think, but by then they can’t bear to question too deeply; that would jeopardize their self-worth, and they haven’t time to rebuild it.

For an intelligent, creative, and expansive species like ours, this rush to nowhere is among the greatest of evils. And yet it continues, mostly unquestioned. At no point in the usual Western life do we stop, take some serious time for ourselves, and think about the overall:

• What’s life about anyway? What’s the point of what we do?
• What’s the purpose of a career? Why should I care about it above everything else?
• Why should I glorify the existing system? Why should I agree to support it?
• Who paid for everything I learned in school?
• Should I have a family? If so, why? If not, why not?
• What do I think is fun? Does it really coincide with the beer ads on TV?
• What’s the purpose of being like everyone else? Why am I so afraid to be different?

We don’t address such questions. Rather, we’re pushed past them. Even in a church or synagogue – places where larger questions are supposed to be addressed – the person in the pulpit wants us to become and/or remain a member of the congregation; their job depends upon it. There are true ministers and rabbis, but for most it’s all too easy to push their audience into what’s convenient. As a result, we see little motivation in the modern West, save for the basest of motivators: things that match a line from the Bible that says, “Whose god is their belly.”

Mind you, I’m not against wealth, good food, or sex. I think those are fine things. They are not, however, the whole of life. We are much bigger than that. We ought not be limited to belly-level aspirations. But when we’re rushed, that’s all we’re able to see.

Status and Fear: The two big motivators we face in this rush through life – fear and status – are both negative. Fear is a manipulation technology; people who make you afraid are hacking your mind. They want you to ignore reason and obey them fast. (I wish I could cover this in depth here, but we haven’t space. Please see issue #54 of my subscription newsletter.) When we’re afraid, we make our worst choices. Put plainly, fear makes us stupid. But we encounter it on a daily basis… and it destroys us by inches.

Status is the compulsion to compare ourselves with others, and whether we’re looking for the ways we’re better than others or looking for our shortcomings, it is deeply destructive. It’s also irrational, but the advertising business would crash without it and advertisers currently own the collective eyeballs of humanity.

Fear and status are, in a broad sense, drugs, and if you had a choice between smoking pot every day or being on fear and status every day, I’d definitely recommend the pot.

Confusion: Let’s be clear on something: Nearly every adult in the West will agree that politicians are liars and thieves… and yet they obey them without question. Is there any possibility we’d do such things if we weren’t harried and confused? When we are confused, we pass over our own minds and their deliberations. There’s an old joke: “Who are you gonna believe, me or your lyin’ eyes?” But that’s precisely what confusion does to us, and under the pressures of confusion and authority, most people will ignore their own eyes.

Such things do not happen to people who are calm and confident. But the existing hierarchies of the West couldn’t function with a calm and confident populace; their operations require people to be frightened, confused, and blindly chasing status.

As a Result… As a result, most of us hurry through life, never knowing why. We live as others do, simply because that path is streamlined for us, exposing us to a minimal level of fear and shame. But that path does something else: It keeps us from experiencing ourselves. Seldom has this problem been put more succinctly than in this quote from Albert Einstein: “Small is the number of them who see with their own eyes and feel with their own hearts.”

Stop following the crowd. Turn your back on the popular script. Stop feeding at the same trough as everyone else. Break away and learn to see with your own eyes, to feel with your own heart. Don’t conform. Let people criticize you. Decide for yourself what your life will be about. Make it matter.”

"A True Mother..."

"For many great deeds are accomplished in times of squalid struggle. There is a kind of stubborn, unrecognized courage which in the lowest depths tenaciously resists the pressures of necessity and ill-doing; there are noble and obscure triumphs observed by no one, unacclaimed by any fanfare. Hardship, loneliness, and penury are a battlefield which has its own heroes, sometimes greater than those lauded in history. Strong and rare characters are thus created; poverty nearly always a foster-mother, may become a true mother, distress may be the nursemaid of pride, and misfortune the milk that nourishes great spirits."
- Victor Hugo

Gregory Mannarino, PM 5/2/21: "Markets, A Look Ahead: This Week, Two Critical Things To Watch!"

Gregory Mannarino, PM 5/2/21:
"Markets, A Look Ahead: 
This Week, Two Critical Things To Watch!"

The Poet: Robinson Jeffers, “Be Angry at the Sun”

“Be Angry at the Sun”

“That public men publish falsehoods
Is nothing new. That America must accept,
Like the historical republics corruption and empire
Has been known for years.
Be angry at the sun for setting
If these things anger you. 
Watch the wheel slope and turn,
They are all bound on the wheel, these people,
Those warriors,
This republic, Europe, Asia.
Observe them gesticulating,
Observe them going down. The gang serves lies,
the passionate Man plays his part; 
the cold passion for truth
Hunts in no pack.
You are not Catullus, you know,
To lampoon these crude sketches of Caesar. You are far
From Dante’s feet, but even farther from his dirty
Political hatreds.
Let boys want pleasure, and men
Struggle for power, and women perhaps for fame,
And the servile to serve a Leader and dupes
to be duped.
Yours is not theirs.”

- Robinson Jeffers, 1941

Musical Interlude: Kevin Kern, "Another Realm"

Kevin Kern, "Another Realm"

The Daily "Near You?"

Ukiah, California, USA. Thanks for stopping by!

"I Can't Convince Myself..."

“I can’t convince myself that it does much good to try to challenge the everyday political delusions and dementias of Americans at large. Their contained and confined mentalities by far prefer the petty and parochial prisons of the kind of sense they have been trained and rewarded for making out of their lives (and are punished for deviating from them). What it costs them ultimately to be such slaves and infants and ideological zombies is a thought too monstrous and rending and spiky for them even to want to glance at.”
- Kenneth Smith

“If you want to tell people the truth, make them laugh, otherwise they’ll kill you.”
- Oscar Wilde

“Why Not Despair?”

“Why Not Despair?”

"“To view our times as decadent and dangerous, to mistrust the government, to imagine that those in power as not concerned with our best interests is not paranoid but perceptive; to be depressed, angry or confused about such things is not delusional but a sign of consciousness. Yet our culture suggests otherwise. But if all this is true, then why not despair? The simple answer is this: despair is the suicide of imagination. Whatever reality presses upon us, there still remains the possibility of imagining something better, and in this dream remains the frontier of our humanity and its possibilities To despair is to voluntarily close a door that has not yet shut. The task is to bear knowledge without it destroying ourselves, to challenge the wrong without ending up on its casualty list. “You don’t have to change the world,” the writer Colman McCarthy has argued. “Just keep the world from changing you.”

Oddly, those who instinctively understand this best are often those who seem to have the least reason to do so – survivors of abuse, oppression, and isolation who somehow discover not so much how to beat the odds, but how to wriggle around them. They have, without formal instruction, learned two of the most fundamental lessons of psychiatry, philosophy, and religion:

You are not responsible for that into which you were born...
You are responsible for doing something about it.

These individuals move through life like a skilled mariner in a storm rather than as a victim at a sacrifice. Relatively unburdened by pointless and debilitating guilt about the past, uninterested in the endless regurgitation of the unalterable, they free themselves to concentrate upon the present and the future. They face the gale as a sturdy combatant rather than as cowering supplicant.”
- Sam Smith

"Covid-19 Pandemic Update 5/23/21"

"Covid-19 Pandemic Update 5/23/21"
“When you don’t have the data and you don’t have
 the actual evidence, you’ve got to make a judgment call." 


SUN MAY 23, AT 2:00 PM: "Wuhan Lab Workers Were 'So Sick They Sought Hospitalization' According To US Intelligence" "They may represent 'the first known cluster...'"
 Updated May 23, 2021, 10:08 A.M. E.T.
The coronavirus pandemic has sickened more than 166,815,600 
people, according to official counts, including 33,126,900 Americans.
Globally at least 3,455,400 have died.

Updated May 23, 2021, 10:08 A.M. E.T.
"The COVID Tracking Project"
Every day, our volunteers compile the latest numbers on tests, cases, 
hospitalizations, and patient outcomes from every US state and territory.
https://covidtracking.com/
"The individual comes face-to-face with a conspiracy so monstrous he cannot believe it exists. The American mind has not come to a realization of the evil which has been introduced into our midst. It rejects even the assumption that human creatures could espouse a philosophy which must ultimately destroy all that is good and decent."
- J. Edgar Hoover
"The 'Cases' We’re Not Hearing About"
by Eric Peters

"We have heard endlessly, practically every 15 minutes – about “the cases!” “the cases!” – of positive tests. But almost nothing about the cases of people becoming very sick and some of them very dead after being injected with the “vaccines.” Plural; there are at least three. Which is a weird thing in itself, when you think about it. Why three?

Doesn’t that at least triple the odds of their being a problem? And of figuring out what it is, if there seems to be one? And there is at least one admitted-to problem – that of blood clot formation in some of the victim-recipients of these concoctions. Who (to be fair to the pharmaceutical cartel) failed to exercise the due diligence normally expected of anyone buying a used car; they didn’t even check for “Bondo.” Instead, they simply rolled up their sleeve and allowed themselves to be injected with an unknown substance with unknown risks. Which is Jim Jonesian, almost. The mindless, even hysterical Faith is certainly the same.

The only real difference – ironically – is that the latter-day injected want (presumably) to live. And yet, they are shockingly reckless with their lives. They have no idea what is being shot into them- because no one does. Except perhaps those who made what is being shot into them. And yet, they line up like it’s Black Friday and the latest GameBoy is on the shelves.

It is an interesting symptom of the sickness – the mental illness – going around. On the one hand, literally hysterical fear of a physical sickness that is known to have an extremely low risk of death for most people; on the other, an equally hysterical eagerness of these same people to assume an unknown risk they’ve been told – italicized, to make the point – is “safe and effective,” two things that cannot yet be known given the fact that these “vaccines” are much too new to have any kind of established track record to make such claims, nor prior human trails to support such claims.

We are supposed to just trust the pharmaceutical cartel – which has immunized itself from any liability for the harms its vaccines may cause going forward and which has an established track record of causing them in the past. Would you buy a used car on that basis?

It is a fact – inarguable – that these “vaccines” are not safe, for at least some of the thousands of people the CDC admits have suffered death coincident to being injected and the tens of thousands of “adverse” effects the CDC has also acknowledged – but the public hears  very little about this from the Fear Organ that emitted a juggernaut of hysteria about “the cases! the cases!”... of positive tests.

This disparity ought to raise some eyebrows, call into question the motives of the grinders of the Fear Organ. All that concern about  hypothetical “granny” dying because someone who wasn’t sick didn’t wear a “mask” to buy groceries. Almost no concern at all about the actual people who’ve actually died – or become very sick – after coming into contact with a Needle.

Parents who would never let their kid ride a tricycle without a helmet or walk to school are unworried about them being injected with god-knows-what for the sake of risk that is for them so attenuated as to be all-but-nonexistent. It is all very...interesting.
 Perhaps even more than we realize – yet.

What follows is admittedly anecdotal but I am personally vouching for it since I personally know the people involved.

My sister reports the case of her old high school friend’s mom – neither elderly nor previously sick – suffering a stroke shortly after being injected with one of the “vaccines.”

The teller at my bank – whom I’ve known for years – inadvertently gave me a large sum of extra money when I went to cash a check the other day; when I went to return the money, she told me she had been “feeling foggy” and having “trouble concentrating”...after being injected.

A good friend of mine is a nurse at a VA hospital. He reports that several of the people he works with – not patients, staff –  have had “bad” reactions to the Holy Anointing, including one who became extremely sick and had to go the hospital for treatment.

That’s a lot of people within my own small orbit. It is much more concerning to me than a “virus” that hasn’t killed anyone I know or even gotten anyone I know seriously sick. Including myself, notwithstanding my utter failure to “practice” any sickness kabuki whatsoever. I do know a few who, over the course of the past year, felt not-so-great for a few days. Which is – which was – a quite normal thing in the Before Time, when catching a bug and having a cough and body aches for a few days wasn’t cause for hysteria.

But why no hysteria emanating from the Fear Organ over the fact that previously healthy people are becoming not-healthy (and worse) after being injected? This hysteria would be legitimate, too –  because unlike the ‘Rona, which is almost exclusively a threat to the very elderly and the already sick, the vaccines are a threat to the healthy and not-elderly.

Yet – strangely, if one assumes that “safety” and “health” truly are the motivating factors behind all of this – the injections continue to be pushed on the healthy population. Clear signals are being sent from corporations and the government (they are increasingly the same thing, in different form) that those who do not submit to being Anointed will be debarred from air travel – which many must use for their work and which is the only practical way for many to see family members living far away – their access to “public” areas and so on denied. It is a clear threat of repercussions – piled on top of the manufactured threat of a “virus” that has been deliberately blown out of all proportion. Which serves the purpose of terrifying millions of healthy people into willingly lining up to be injected.

One might ask – why?  Why the hysteric urgency to mass-vaccinate healthy people who stand literally almost no chance of dying from the ‘Rona with vaccines that may well stand a higher chance of doing them permanent harm? Given the percolating facts about problems with these vaccines, why not dial it back a bit?

Perhaps it is sensible for the relatively small number of people who do stand a more than 0.0-something chance of dying from the ‘Rona  to assume the risk of being injected. Maybe, on balance, it is worth it – for them. Like chemo, for those with cancer. As a last resort – to avoid dying. After having tried everything else. But it makes no sense for the the healthy population – especially children – to be injected...unless there is some other objective. Given the facts about the vaccines – and the suppression of the facts about the ‘Rona – it is something worth considering.

There is a quote making the rounds online attributed to Jacques Attali, who was an adviser to French President Francois Mitterand back in the ’80s. Its provenance may be questionable but the sentiments it expresses ring true: “The future will be about finding a way to reduce the population. Of course, we will not be able to execute people or build camps. We get rid of them by making them believe it is for their own good. We will find or cause something, a pandemic targeting certain people, a real economic crisis or not, a virus affecting the old or the elderly, it doesn’t matter, the weak and the fearful will succumb to it. The stupid will believe in it and ask to be treated. We will have taken care of having planned the treatment, a treatment that will be the solution.” God help us, if it is."
Related, highly recommended:
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"How It Really Is, And Will Be"

 
And how it all ends for the good ship World Economy...
Full screen recommended.

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