Thursday, February 16, 2023

"The Ohio Train Derailment Toxic Dioxin Bomb Is Far Worse Than We Realized"

"The Ohio Train Derailment Toxic Dioxin Bomb
 Is Far Worse Than We Realized"
by Mike Adams

"I am shocked to learn the horrifying facts about the toxicity of dioxins, a class of chemical compounds formed when chlorinated compounds are burned. The authorities who set fire to the vinyl chloride in Ohio have unleashed an ecological catastrophe that's causing dioxin fallout on food, farms and families in Ohio, Pennsylvania and other states.

The maximum lifetime "safe" exposure to dioxins is 1/10,000th the mass of a single grain of table salt. This means if you get one drop of dioxin chemicals on you, it's over. Massive cancer. Infertility. Spontaneous abortions, endocrine disruptions, etc. Very bad news.

Today we interview a hazardous materials incident response expert who specializes in train wreck cleanups. What he shares with us is truly disturbing... the single largest toxic chemical ecological disaster in American history."
Full video interview here:
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Gerald Celente, "Inflation Up, Markets Down; The Worst Is Yet To Come"

Full screen recommended.
Very strong language alert!
Gerald Celente, 2/16/23:
"Inflation Up, Markets Down; The Worst Is Yet To Come"
"The Trends Journal is a weekly magazine analyzing global current events forming future trends. Our mission is to present facts and truth over fear and propaganda to help subscribers prepare for what’s next in these increasingly turbulent times."
Comments here:

"People Knocking At Your Door For Help, Things Are About To Get Worse"

Jeremiah Babe, 2/16/23:
"People Knocking At Your Door For Help, 
Things Are About To Get Worse"
Comments here:

"Fraud!!!"

"Fraud!!!"
By Brian Maher

Annapolis, Maryland - "The United States Government Accountability Office is on the case…GAO is out to specify the amount of taxpayer monies lost to fraud at the federal level: "Measuring and estimating the extent of fraud is part of broader efforts to improve agencies’ actions to strategically manage fraud risk. The broader work includes putting those measures and estimates in context so that the federal government can effectively use fraud measurement and estimation to enhance its ability to prevent, detect and respond to fraud. We are still in our research and design phase, so we do not yet have a finalized timeframe. However, we are striving to complete the work before the end of the year."

Just so. And we are striving to complete our work to cease drinking alcohol, to shed 50 pounds of blubber and to be kind to our fellow man — all before the end of the year. We hazard our work will prove equally successful as GAO’s work. Results to date are profoundly disappointing… though we delight in reminding ourself that the year is youthful. We nonetheless wish GAO the highest luck.

“Clean up the Whorehouse” Incidentally: The Office of Management and Budget confirmed $4.5 billion in fraudulent spending during fiscal year 2021. The true amount? We can merely speculate. Yet we bet high the true figure vastly exceeds it.

GAO’s anti-fraud campaign puts us in mind of the late libertarian tub-thumper Frank Chodorov. They are out to “clean up the whorehouse,” while “keeping the business intact”… in Mr. Chodorov’s unimprovable characterization. Yet while the United States Government Accountability Office alerts us to fraudulent misuse of taxpayer monies… the Congressional Budget Office alerts us to a fraud greater yet… a fraud of proportions truly colossal.

The Real Fraud Upon the American People: The New York Times gives the greater fraud’s particulars: "The United States is on track to add nearly $19 trillion to its national debt over the next decade, $3 trillion more than previously forecast, the result of rising costs for interest payments, veterans’ health care, retiree benefits and the military, the Congressional Budget Office said Wednesday."

Another $19 trillion! Riveted atop today’s $31.5 trillion! Thus we can expect a galactic $50.5 in national debt by 2033… if CBO’s crystal-gazing has anything in it. We concede it at once: CBO must weigh unknowable and imponderable variable after unknowable imponderable variable. We hazard this bunch cannot give an accurate reading one month out — at the very price of its soul — much less one decade out. And each assumption it entertains may be fated for the hellbox. Perhaps the true figure will come in lower. It is quite possible.

What if It’s Even Higher? Yet we must concede the grim possibility that CBO gives a true reading — or that the true figure will exceed CBO’s $50.5 trillion guesswork. We must also issue a very stringent qualification…$50.5 trillion of debt, taken alone, is plenty handsome. Yet it cannot be considered alone. It must be shoehorned into… context.

Assume two men. Each bears a $50,500 debt. That is, the nominal debt they shoulder is identical. Now consider: One of these men takes aboard $1 million in annual income. He is flush… and can negotiate his $50,500 debt quite easily. It represents no great burden upon him. Meantime, the other man hauls in $75,000 annually. A debt-free fellow can scrape along generally well with his $75,000. But what if his $75,000 must hold aloft a $50,500 debt burden? His debt forms an impossible millstone upon his neck. It is unendurable and will soon swamp and sink him. This man is in a very bad way.

Can the U.S. Support Its Debt? Can the United States of 2033 hold a $50.5 trillion federal debt upon its shoulders? We are riddled and hagridden by doubt. For the matter of that…Can the United States of 2023 hold a $31.5 trillion federal debt upon its shoulders?

Again, we are not convinced that it can. Explains Jim Rickards: "Countries are no different than people, at least to that extent. Right now, the debt is $31 trillion, but GDP is around $25 trillion, give or take. You can express it as a percentage. So if you take the amount of debt, divide it by GDP, what's that number? Right now, that number is about 124%. In other words,. When you divide 31 by 25, the number you get is around 24. 124% is the current U.S. debt-to-GDP ratio."

And so, Jim? "There's a ton of economic research indicating that a debt-to-GDP ratio of 90% represents the danger zone. That's the red line. When it hits 90%, something happens, and that something is that you no longer get a dollar of growth for a dollar of debt. When you go above 90%, the so-called money multiplier goes negative, meaning that a borrowed dollar no longer generates growth. It just adds more debt. And the higher you go above 90%, the less growth it generates. At 124%, the U.S. is far above that threshold.

Now, you can’t borrow your way out of a debt crisis. The more you borrow, the worse it gets. You’re just digging yourself a deeper hole. You're in a death spiral heading for default. Of course, the U.S. is unlikely to default because we can just print the money. But that’s really just another form of default that destroys the currency ultimately. The only real way out is to cut spending and stop the borrowing." We noticed a recent article asking the impossibly and unfathomably naive question:

“Will Federal Spending Be Brought Under Control?” We fell instantly from our chair, stricken and convulsed with laughter. As well ask if the abovesaid whorehouse can be brought under control.

Same Old, Same Old: If you believe that Republican victories in the 2024 elections will “clean up the whorehouse”... and ax the budget… have another guess. From the article just referenced, authored by a certain Jason Sorens: "The Republican House will probably shift spending somewhat from Democratic to Republican priorities, but if Democrats or Republicans take full control of D.C. after the 2024 election, they will, more likely than not, increase spending on their priorities without cutting what’s already been “baked in” to the federal budget… divided government can only delay growth in government, not reverse it."

We fear this Sorens fellow is correct. The historical record is with him, spanning decades and decades. Of this you can be supremely certain: Congress is the one whorehouse that will never close…"

Musical Interlude: Ludovico Einaudi, "Divenire, Live at Royal Albert Hall, London"

Full screen recommended.
Ludovico Einaudi, 
"Divenire, Live at Royal Albert Hall, London"

"A Look to the Heavens"

"The rim of the large blue galaxy at the right is an immense ring-like structure 150,000 light years in diameter composed of newly formed, extremely bright, massive stars. AM 0644-741 is known as a ring galaxy and was caused by an immense galaxy collision. When galaxies collide, they pass through each other and their individual stars rarely come into contact. The large galaxy's ring-like shape is the result of the gravitational disruption caused by a small intruder galaxy passing through it. When this happens, interstellar gas and dust become compressed, causing a wave of star formation to move out from the impact point like a ripple across the surface of a pond. 
Other galaxies in the field of view are background galaxies, not interacting with AM 0644-741. Foreground spiky stars are within our own Milky Way. But the smaller intruder galaxy is caught above and right, near the top of the frame taken by the Hubble Space Telescope. Ring galaxy AM 0644-741 lies about 300 million light years away toward the southern constellation Volans."

"Albanian Proverb"

"When you have given nothing, ask for nothing."
- Albanian Proverb

"The Science of Stress and How Our Emotions Affect Our Susceptibility to Burnout and Disease"

"The Science of Stress and How Our Emotions
Affect Our Susceptibility to Burnout and Disease"
by Maria Popova

"I had lived thirty good years before enduring my first food poisoning - odds quite fortunate in the grand scheme of things, but miserably unfortunate in the immediate experience of it. I found myself completely incapacitated to erect the pillars of my daily life - too cognitively foggy to read and write, too physically weak to work out or even meditate. The temporary disability soon elevated the assault on my mind and body to a new height of anguish: an intense experience of stress. Even as I consoled myself with Nabokov’s exceptionally florid account of food poisoning, I couldn’t shake the overwhelming malaise that had engulfed me - somehow, a physical illness had completely colored my psychoemotional reality.

This experience, of course, is far from uncommon. Long before scientists began shedding light on how our minds and bodies actually affect one another, an intuitive understanding of this dialogue between the body and the emotions, or feelings, emerged and permeated our very language: We use “feeling sick” as a grab-bag term for both the sensory symptoms - fever, fatigue, nausea - and the psychological malaise, woven of emotions like sadness and apathy.

Pre-modern medicine, in fact, has recognized this link between disease and emotion for millennia. Ancient Greek, Roman, and Indian Ayurvedic physicians all enlisted the theory of the four humors - blood, yellow bile, black bile, and phlegm - in their healing practices, believing that imbalances in these four visible secretions of the body caused disease and were themselves often caused by the emotions. These beliefs are fossilized in our present language - melancholy comes from the Latin words for “black” (melan) and “bitter bile” (choler), and we think of a melancholic person as gloomy or embittered; a phlegmatic person is languid and impassive, for phlegm makes one lethargic.

And then French philosopher and mathematician René Descartes came along in the seventeenth century, taking it upon himself to eradicate the superstitions that fueled the religious wars of the era by planting the seed of rationalism. But the very tenets that laid the foundation of modern science - the idea that truth comes only from what can be visibly ascertained and proven beyond doubt - severed this link between the physical body and the emotions; those mysterious and fleeting forces, the biological basis of which the tools of modern neuroscience are only just beginning to understand, seemed to exist entirely outside the realm of what could be examined with the tools of rationalism.

For nearly three centuries, the idea that our emotions could impact our physical health remained scientific taboo - setting out to fight one type of dogma, Descartes had inadvertently created another, which we’re only just beginning to shake off. It was only in the 1950s that Austrian-Canadian physician and physiologist Hans Selye pioneered the notion of stress as we now know it today, drawing the scientific community’s attention to the effects of stress on physical health and popularizing the concept around the world. (In addition to his scientific dedication, Selye also understood the branding component of any successful movement and worked tirelessly to include the word itself in dictionaries around the world; today, “stress” is perhaps the word pronounced most similarly in the greatest number of major languages.)

But no researcher has done more to illuminate the invisible threads that weave mind and body together than Dr. Esther Sternberg. Her groundbreaking work on the link between the central nervous system and the immune system, exploring how immune molecules made in the blood can trigger brain function that profoundly affects our emotions, has revolutionized our understanding of the integrated being we call a human self. In the immeasurably revelatory "The Balance Within: The Science Connecting Health and Emotions" (public library), Sternberg examines the interplay of our emotions and our physical health, mediated by that seemingly nebulous yet, it turns out, remarkably concrete experience called stress.

With an eye to modern medicine’s advances in cellular and molecular biology, which have made it possible to measure how our nervous system and our hormones affect our susceptibility to diseases as varied as depression, arthritis, AIDS, and chronic fatigue syndrome, Sternberg writes: "By parsing these chemical intermediaries, we can begin to understand the biological underpinnings of how emotions affect diseases…

The same parts of the brain that control the stress response… play an important role in susceptibility and resistance to inflammatory diseases such as arthritis. And since it is these parts of the brain that also play a role in depression, we can begin to understand why it is that many patients with inflammatory diseases may also experience depression at different times in their lives… Rather than seeing the psyche as the source of such illnesses, we are discovering that while feelings don’t directly cause or cure disease, the biological mechanisms underlying them may cause or contribute to disease. Thus, many of the nerve pathways and molecules underlying both psychological responses and inflammatory disease are the same, making predisposition to one set of illnesses likely to go along with predisposition to the other. 

The questions need to be rephrased, therefore, to ask which of the many components that work together to create emotions also affect that other constellation of biological events, immune responses, which come together to fight or to cause disease. Rather than asking if depressing thoughts can cause an illness of the body, we need to ask what the molecules and nerve pathways are that cause depressing thoughts. And then we need to ask whether these affect the cells and molecules that cause disease.
[…]
We are even beginning to sort out how emotional memories reach the parts of the brain that control the hormonal stress response, and how such emotions can ultimately affect the workings of the immune system and thus affect illnesses as disparate as arthritis and cancer. We are also beginning to piece together how signals from the immune system can affect the brain and the emotional and physical responses it controls: the molecular basis of feeling sick. In all this, the boundaries between mind and body are beginning to blur."

Indeed, the relationship between memory, emotion, and stress is perhaps the most fascinating aspect of Sternberg’s work. She considers how we deal with the constant swirl of inputs and outputs as we move through the world, barraged by a stream of stimuli and sensations:

"Every minute of the day and night we feel thousands of sensations that might trigger a positive emotion such as happiness, or a negative emotion such as sadness, or no emotion at all: a trace of perfume, a light touch, a fleeting shadow, a strain of music. And there are thousands of physiological responses, such as palpitations or sweating, that can equally accompany positive emotions such as love, or negative emotions such as fear, or can happen without any emotional tinge at all. What makes these sensory inputs and physiological outputs emotions is the charge that gets added to them somehow, somewhere in our brains. Emotions in their fullest sense comprise all of these components. Each can lead into the black box and produce an emotional experience, or something in the black box can lead out to an emotional response that seems to come from nowhere."

Memory, it turns out, is one of the major factors mediating the dialogue between sensation and emotional experience. Our memories of past experience become encoded into triggers that act as switchers on the rail of psychoemotional response, directing the incoming train of present experience in the direction of one emotional destination or another.

Sternberg writes: "Mood is not homogeneous like cream soup. It is more like Swiss cheese, filled with holes. The triggers are highly specific, tripped by sudden trails of memory: a faint fragrance, a few bars of a tune, a vague silhouette that tapped into a sad memory buried deep, but not completely erased. These sensory inputs from the moment float through layers of time in the parts of the brain that control memory, and they pull out with them not only reminders of sense but also trails of the emotions that were first connected to the memory. These memories become connected to emotions, which are processed in other parts of the brain: the amygdala for fear, the nucleus accumbens for pleasure - those same parts that the anatomists had named for their shapes. And these emotional brain centers are linked by nerve pathways to the sensory parts of the brain and to the frontal lobe and hippocampus - the coordinating centers of thought and memory. The same sensory input can trigger a negative emotion or a positive one, depending on the memories associated with it."

This is where stress comes in - much like memory mediates how we interpret and respond to various experiences, a complex set of biological and psychological factors determine how we respond to stress. Some types of stress can be stimulating and invigorating, mobilizing us into action and creative potency; others can be draining and incapacitating, leaving us frustrated and hopeless. This dichotomy of good vs. bad stress, Sternberg notes, is determined by the biology undergirding our feelings - by the dose and duration of the stress hormones secreted by the body in response to the stressful stimulus. She explains the neurobiological machinery behind this response:

" As soon as the stressful event occurs, it triggers the release of the cascade of hypothalamic, pituitary, and adrenal hormones - the brain’s stress response. It also triggers the adrenal glands to release epinephrine, or adrenaline, and the sympathetic nerves to squirt out the adrenaline-like chemical norepinephrine all over the body: nerves that wire the heart, and gut, and skin. So, the heart is driven to beat faster, the fine hairs of your skin stand up, you sweat, you may feel nausea or the urge to defecate. But your attention is focused, your vision becomes crystal clear, a surge of power helps you run - these same chemicals released from nerves make blood flow to your muscles, preparing you to sprint.

All this occurs quickly. If you were to measure the stress hormones in your blood or saliva, they would already be increased within three minutes of the event. In experimental psychology tests, playing a fast-paced video game will make salivary cortisol increase and norepinephrine spill over into venous blood almost as soon as the virtual battle begins. But if you prolong the stress, by being unable to control it or by making it too potent or long-lived, and these hormones and chemicals still continue to pump out from nerves and glands, then the same molecules that mobilized you for the short haul now debilitate you."

These effects of stress exist on a bell curve - that is, some is good, but too much becomes bad: As the nervous system secretes more and more stress hormones, performance increases, but up to a point; after that tipping point, performance begins to suffer as the hormones continue to flow. What makes stress “bad” - that is, what makes it render us more pervious to disease - is the disparity between the nervous system and immune system’s respective pace. Sternberg explains:

"The nervous system and the hormonal stress response react to a stimulus in milliseconds, seconds, or minutes. The immune system takes parts of hours or days. It takes much longer than two minutes for immune cells to mobilize and respond to an invader, so it is unlikely that a single, even powerful, short-lived stress on the order of moments could have much of an effect on immune responses. However, when the stress turns chronic, immune defenses begin to be impaired. As the stressful stimulus hammers on, stress hormones and chemicals continue to pump out. Immune cells floating in this milieu in blood, or passing through the spleen, or growing up in thymic nurseries never have a chance to recover from the unabated rush of cortisol. Since cortisol shuts down immune cells’ responses, shifting them to a muted form, less able to react to foreign triggers, in the context of continued stress we are less able to defend and fight when faced with new invaders. And so, if you are exposed to, say, a flu or common cold virus when you are chronically stressed out, your immune system is less able to react and you become more susceptible to that infection."

Extended exposure to stress, especially to a variety of stressors at the same time - any combination from the vast existential menu of life-events like moving, divorce, a demanding job, the loss of a loved one, and even ongoing childcare - adds up a state of extreme exhaustion that leads to what we call burnout.

Sternberg writes: "Members of certain professions are more prone to burnout than others - nurses and teachers, for example, are among those at highest risk. These professionals are faced daily with caregiving situations in their work lives, often with inadequate pay, inadequate help in their jobs, and with too many patients or students in their charge. Some studies are beginning to show that burnt-out patients may have not only psychological burnout, but also physiological burnout: a flattened cortisol response and inability to respond to any stress with even a slight burst of cortisol. In other words, chronic unrelenting stress can change the stress response itself. And it can change other hormone systems in the body as well.

One of the most profound such changes affects the reproductive system - extended periods of stress can shut down the secretion of reproductive hormones in both men and women, resulting in lower fertility. But the effects are especially perilous for women - recurring and extended episodes of depression result in permanent changes in bone structure, increasing the risk of osteoporosis. In other words, we register stress literally in our bones."

But stress isn’t a direct causal function of the circumstances we’re in - what either amplifies or ameliorates our experience of stress is, once again, memory. Sternberg writes: "Our perception of stress, and therefore our response to it, is an ever-changing thing that depends a great deal on the circumstances and settings in which we find ourselves. It depends on previous experience and knowledge, as well as on the actual event that has occurred. And it depends on memory, too."

The most acute manifestation of how memory modulates stress is post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD. For striking evidence of how memory encodes past experience into triggers, which then catalyze present experience, Sternberg points to research by psychologist Rachel Yehuda, who found both Holocaust survivors and their first-degree relatives - that is, children and siblings - exhibited a similar hormonal stress response.

This, Sternberg points out, could be a combination of nature and nurture - the survivors, as young parents for whom the trauma was still fresh, may well have subconsciously taught their children a common style of stress-responsiveness; but it’s also possible that these automatic hormonal stress responses permanently changed the parents’ biology and were transmitted via DNA to their children. Once again, memory encodes stress into our very bodies. Sternberg considers the broader implications:

"Stress need not be on the order of war, rape, or the Holocaust to trigger at least some elements of PTSD. Common stresses that we all experience can trigger the emotional memory of a stressful circumstance - and all its accompanying physiological responses. Prolonged stress - such as divorce, a hostile workplace, the end of a relationship, or the death of a loved one - can all trigger elements of PTSD."

Among the major stressors - which include life-events expected to be on the list, such as divorce and the death of a loved one - is also one somewhat unexpected situation, at least to those who haven’t undergone it: moving. Sternberg considers the commonalities between something as devastating as death and something as mundane as moving:

"One is certainly loss - the loss of someone or something familiar. Another is novelty - finding oneself in a new and unfamiliar place because of the loss. Together these amount to change: moving away from something one knows and toward something one doesn’t. An unfamiliar environment is a universal stressor to nearly all species, no matter how developed or undeveloped."

In the remainder of the thoroughly illuminating "The Balance Within," Sternberg goes on to explore the role of interpersonal relationships in both contributing to stress and shielding us from it, how the immune system changes our moods, and what we can do to harness these neurobiological insights in alleviating our experience of the stressors with which every human life is strewn."

The Poet: Theodore Roethke, “The Return”

“The Return”

“Suddenly the window will open
and Mother will call,
it's time to come in.
The wall will part,
I will enter heaven in muddy shoes.
I will come to the table
and answer questions rudely.
I am all right, leave me
alone. Head in hand I
sit and sit. How can I tell them
about that long
and tangled way?
Here in heaven mothers
knit green scarves;
flies buzz.
Father dozes by the stove
after six days' labor.
No - surely I can't tell them
that people are at each
other's throats.”
- Theodore Roethke

The Daily "Near You?"

Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada. Thanks for stopping by!

"Acceptance..."

"Acceptance is a crucial step forward for those who prefer the idea of living this life over simply existing within it. Accept all that you've said and what you've done, because you cannot change your past. Accept the idea of the unknown, because the future is the unknown waiting patiently to reveal itself. Accept the person you have become thus far in your journey, because you are the only person who will be there with you when you finish it. Do all of this so that you may never find yourself having to accept regret that haunts you at two a.m., leaving you sweaty and broken hearted. All you have is this minute; not this hour, or this day, or this year. Live in this minute so that you won't get stuck simply existing with your guilty past, or with nothing but anxiety for the future."
- Margaret E. Rise

"Global Empire - The World According to Seymour Hersh" [Part One]

Full screen recommended.
TeleSUR English, 2/16/23:
"Global Empire - 
The World According to Seymour Hersh" [Part One]
"Tariq Ali talks to investigative journalist, Seymour Hersh, about the assassination of Osama bin Laden in Pakistan in 2011 and describes what the Americans and Pakistanis knew about his whereabouts."
Comments here:
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Judge Napolitano, "The Russian Offensive in Ukraine - Scott Ritter"

Judge Napolitano - Judging Freedom, 2/16/23:
"The Russian Offensive in Ukraine - Scott Ritter"
Comments here:
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George Galloway, 2/16/23:
"Interview: Former CIA Man Larry Johnson"
"Interview: Is NATO going to escalate the Ukraine  War? They’re doing everything to sustain the conflict says former CIA agent Larry Johnson but they just don’t have the deadly materiel."
Comments here:

Bill Bonner, "American Hegemon"

"American Hegemon"
War, inflation and other familiar signs on the road to ruin...
By Bill Bonner and Joel Bowman

Buenos Aires, Argentina - "For the past 30 years, the American hegemonic project has proved both unsustainably expensive and strategically illusory." ~ The 2018 "National Defense Strategy: Continuity and Competition"

"We arrived in Buenos Aires this morning. Population: 3 million. Temperature: about 75 degrees. Inflation rate: 99%/yr. How can you live well when prices double every 12 months? We’re going to find out.

Meanwhile, we’re working our way through recent headlines, trying to see where we might be headed. We believe they point to a ‘cluster’ of catastrophes… financial, economic, political and social. The money disaster is obvious. Americans owe too much money, in debts contracted at very low interest rates. As rates rise – which they must, both in response to and opposition to inflation – trillions of dollars’ worth of debt will have to be written off or inflated away. The other disasters are less obvious. It’s one of those that we look at today.

Top Dogs: Empires don’t act like normal countries. They are the alpha male of nations. Or, as Madeleine Albright put it, they are the “indispensable nation.” Like the lead dog on a sled team, they dominate other dogs – by force – and fight off rivals. But as they age, they become vulnerable. It is just a matter of time before the pack turns on them.

Empires age too. They ‘over-stretch.’ They get involved in too many battles...and spend too much money. Then, war and inflation, like age and infirmity, do their work…As reported yesterday, the best recent advice on the war in the Ukraine came from an unlikely source: Mr. Donald Trump. It was he who proposed (before the Deep State insiders got him back on the leash) that the US leave NATO…and it was he who just followed up by suggesting that we should say ‘no’ to requests for more military aid to the Ukraine.

Alas, Mr. Trump is as unreliable to his friends as to his enemies. Now, he claims he saved NATO: “I hope everyone is able to remember that it was me, as President of the United States, that got delinquent NATO members to start paying their dues, which amounted to hundreds of billions of dollars,” Trump wrote in a statement released Monday. “There would be no NATO if I didn’t act strongly and swiftly.”

So, let us leave Mr. Trump and turn to more constant sources. George Washington in his 1796 farewell address warned against ‘foreign entanglements:” "Against the insidious wiles of foreign influence... the jealousy of a free people ought to be constantly awake, since history and experience prove that foreign influence is one of the most baneful foes of republican government."

Words of Warning: But an empire needs to act like an empire. After conquering its own Southern States, it took on Spain…and then Germany…and then Japan…and then the Soviet Union…and then…and then… In his farewell address, in 1961, Dwight Eisenhower warned against where this would lead: "We must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist.

We must never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties or democratic processes. We should take nothing for granted. Only an alert and knowledgeable citizenry can compel the proper meshing of the huge industrial and military machinery of defense with our peaceful methods and goals, so that security and liberty may prosper together."

Taking their wealth and liberties for granted, Americans fell asleep…and the Deep State (along with the entire class of elite…which Antonio Gramsci called the ‘hegemon’) grew. Now it is unstoppable.

Meanwhile, since the time of Peter the Great, in the 17th century, Russia has periodically tried to join the family of European nations. By most accounts, this is what Vladimir Putin desired as well.

Know Thy Enemy’s Enemy: But the hegemon had other ideas. The US/EU/NATO party was already underway in Europe, and the Russians weren’t invited. Instead of leaving NATO, the US strengthened it. And when war broke out, NATO formed up on the side of The Ukraine (though the Ukraine was not a treaty member). This left Russia to seek allies elsewhere. It is finding them, in Africa…and in Latin America. Most ominously, it is creating a potent new coalition…with the natural resources of Russia and Iran, the human resources of India, and the financial and technical resources of China. They are already sharing energy and raw materials, a rival currency and a new financial clearing system.

What will the future bring? We’ve read no more of tomorrow’s headlines than you have. But it looks like America’s wars and sanctions may be breeding the next lead dog. Empires have to die somehow. Inflation and war are time-tested ways to kill them."

Joel’s Note: "If you want to know how the world ends, with a whimper or a bang, you can do worse than examine the situation on the ground here, down at the “fin del mundo.” As Bill mentioned above, inflation is running at a red-hot 99% in Argentina. Here’s the chart, from Bloomberg:
Citizens of orderly, developed nations – with “puny” inflation rates of, say, 6... 8... or even 10%... – want to know: what does 99% inflation mean, practically? How does one run a business... save for retirement... protect one’s wealth from the ravages of money printing?Answer: With great difficulty... stealth... cunning... and a well-honed sense of humor.

First, every business owner keeps (at least) two sets of books: one for the government’s eyes, one for the actual accounts. A friend went through the corporate tax laws here some years ago; if a company was to pay all it owed, officially, its tax bill would amount to something like 120% of earnings. Not even the Argentine government itself expects its citizens to pay that much.

Second, folks get out of the peso, any way they can. The government is strict about capital controls, allowing Argentines only a small allowance (about US$200) of foreign currency purchases per month. So people exchange on the widely-used black market, where, because of the premium on highly sought-after dollars, the unofficial rate is about double what the official rate is. (The official rate this morning was 191 pesos to US$1; unofficially, it’s 374:1) From a local site, DolarHoy.com…
Money exchanging “cuevas” (literally “caves”) are dotted all over the city. They’re “illegal,” but nobody pays attention to the laws anyway. It’s not uncommon to see police officers moonlighting, in uniform, as security guards out front of the exchange houses. (The cuevas pay them in USD, while the government only pays in pesos, so it’s really a no-brainer.)

Third, when and where they can, locals buy real assets. For some, that means farm land. For others, it’s gold or apartments in the city or even building materials. (A pallet of bricks will still be a pallet of bricks a year from now... while a thousand pesos will only be worth five-hundred, at most.) In recent years, younger people have sought refuge in cryptos, with widely varying degrees of success.

And finally, the porteños have a sense of humor and perspective as to what’s really important in life... The subject of inflation came up over dinner last night, at a packed restaurant (Lo de Jesus is a neighborhood favorite, frequented by locals and gringos alike). We were entertaining an old friend, visiting from California. “You wouldn’t think the economy was in the tank,” he remarked. “This place is packed!” “That’s because everyone is getting rid of their pesos as quickly as possible.” “What, by eating them?” “And drinking them, too.” We pointed to the table next to us... and the half a dozen dead malbec soldiers in front of a jovial group of about the same size. “Better six bottles today than three in a year’s time.”

"Please Don't Fall For This"

Full screen recommended.
Dan, iAllegedly, 2/16/23:
"Please Don't Fall For This"
"We got the retail sales numbers. Everyone is jumping up and down because January was a hot month. Restaurants sales were up only because they raised prices because of inflation."
Comments here:

"How It Really Is"

Full screen recommended.
Adventures With Danno, 2/16/23:
"Extremely High Prices At Kroger!
 This Is Concerning! What's Coming!?"
Comments here:
o

Wednesday, February 15, 2023

Canadian Prepper, "Breaking! Nuke Bombers By UK; Lavrov: "Point Of No Return"

Full screen recommended.
Canadian Prepper, 2/15/23:
"Breaking! Nuke Bombers By UK;
 Lavrov: "Point Of No Return"
Comments here:

"California Is Getting Crazy, Time To Say Goodbye; Retail Sales Jump As Consumers Go Broke"

Jeremiah Babe, 2/15/23:
"California Is Getting Crazy, Time To Say Goodbye; 
Retail Sales Jump As Consumers Go Broke"
Comments here:

"Bankers And Tech Executives Know The Collapse Of Society Is Coming And Feverishly Prepare For It"

Full screen recommended.
"Bankers And Tech Executives Know The Collapse 
Of Society Is Coming And Feverishly Prepare For It"
by Epic Economist

"While the general population is too busy working to the bone day after day just to be able to afford to live in an increasingly expensive and chaotic world, banks and tech executives are spending millions upon millions of dollars to quit this mundane narrative and disappear without a trace before a major meltdown begins. Sources confirmed that discussions about the collapse of society have become very popular at Silicon Valley and Wall Street, and as we will show you in this video, having a plan to escape seems to be a new priority among the tech elite as the threat of nuclear conflicts and falling economies continues to rise. Many big names in the financial world are explicitly warning about the real risk of ‘doomsday scenarios’ actually happening in a near future. Ladies and gentlemen, all of this mean that the ultra-wealthy know something that the rest of us don’t, and they are feverishly getting prepared for it.

What possible disruption could be coming for J.P. Morgan Chase’s global head of macro quantitative and derivatives research to publicly warn that the next financial crisis is going to result in social unrest that is unlike anything we’ve ever seen in decades? During an interview with CNBC, Marko Kolanovic alerted that the combination of severe stock market volatility and ineffective central bank actions is likely to provoke the eruption of multiple civil conflicts that could push our society to the brink in no time.

The expert notes that the forces that have transformed markets in the last decade, namely the rise of computerized trading and passive investing, are setting up conditions for brutal moves in the stock market at the end of this cycle. “There will be very rapid, sharp declines in asset values with sharp increases in market volatility,” Kolanovic told CNBC. Prior to 2020, previous flash crashes occurred during a backdrop of a U.S. economic expansion; but the new market hasn’t been tested in the throes of a recession, he highlights.

“Suddenly, every pension fund in the U.S. will be severely underfunded, retail investors will panic and sell, while individuals stop spending,” the banker continued. And the world's wealthiest are among those cautious of a coming calamity. When everything starts to fall apart, it’s safe to say that the elite won’t stick around for the day of reckoning.

According to Forbes’ Jim Dobson, lots of billionaires have private planes "ready to depart at a moment's notice." They also own motorcycles, weaponry, and generators. On top of that, a Bloomberg article makes some additional revelations. The paper reports that over the past two years seven “Silicon Valley entrepreneurs” have purchased survival bunkers from a company in Texas and shipped them to locations in New Zealand, where they’re buried 11 feet underground.

Survival comes at a price. Although these bunkers have been designed to withstand a nuclear blast or nature’s worst, they are a far cry from what most people might expect an underground shelter to look like. There are cinemas, swimming pools with water slides, spas, lounges, gyms, and indoor shooting ranges to keep occupants entertained. Last year, the average asking price for a bunker that could house up to 75 occupants was $4.5 million. So anyone outside the top 1 percent of income earners wouldn’t stand a chance to make it into those facilities.

Unfortunately, the vast majority of us don’t have the money to buy a luxury survival bunker or to fly to New Zealand on a private jet. Money may not be able to buy happiness, but it can buy a pretty good escape plan."

Judge Napolitano, "Col. Doug Macgregor - Ukraine, Ammunition, Tanks & the Russian Offensive"

Judge Napolitano - Judging Freedom, 2/15/23:
"Col. Doug Macgregor - 
Ukraine, Ammunition, Tanks & the Russian Offensive"
Comments here:

Gerald Celente, "America: Private Armies, War Crimes, Cover Ups"

Gerald Celente, 2/15/23:
"America: Private Armies, War Crimes, Cover Ups"
"The Trends Journal is a weekly magazine analyzing global current events forming future trends. Our mission is to present facts and truth over fear and propaganda to help subscribers prepare for what’s next in these increasingly turbulent times."
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"When We Can No Longer Tell the Truth "

"When We Can No Longer Tell the Truth"
by Charles Hugh Smith

"When we can no longer tell the truth because the truth will bring the whole rotten, fragile status quo down in a heap of broken promises and lies, we've reached the perfection of dysfunction. You know the one essential guideline to leadership in a doomed dysfunctional system: when it gets serious, you have to lie. In other words, the status quo's secular goddess is TINA - there is no alternative to lying, because the truth will bring the whole corrupt structure tumbling down.

This core dynamic of dysfunction is scale-invariant, meaning that hiding the truth is the core dynamic in dysfunctional relationships, households, communities, enterprises, cities, corporations, states, alliances, nations and empires: when the truth cannot be told because it threatens the power structure of the status quo, that status quo is doomed.

Lies, half-truths and cover-ups are all manifestations of fatal weakness. What lies, half-truths and cover-ups communicate is: we can no longer fix our real problems, and rather than let this truth out, we must mask it behind lies and phony reassurances.

Truth is power, lies are weakness. All we get now are lies, statistics designed to mislead and phony reassurances that the status quo is stable and permanent. The truth is powerful because it is the core dynamic of solving problems. Lies, gamed statistics and false reassurances are fatal because they doom any sincere efforts to fix what's broken before the system reaches the point of no return.

We are already past the point of no return. The expediency of lies has already doomed us.

Honest accounts of hugely successful corporations that implode share one key trait: in every case, managers were pressured to hide the truth from top management, which then hid the truth from investors and clients. is the key dynamic in failed oligarchies as well: if telling the truth gets you sent to Siberia (or worse), then nobody with any instinct for self-preservation will tell the truth. If obscuring the truth saves one's job, then that's what people do. That this dooms the organization is secondary to immediate self-preservation.

A distorted sense of loyalty to the family, community, company, institution, agency or nation furthers lying as the  solution to unsavory problems. Daddy a drunk? Hide the bottle. Church a hotbed of adultery and thieving? Maintain the facade of holiness at all costs. Company products are failing? Put some lipstick on the pig. The statistical truth doesn't support the party's happy story? Distort the stats until they do what's needed. The agency failed to fulfill its prime directive? Blame the managerial failure on a scapegoat.

Pathological liars and cheats rely on self-preservation and misplaced loyalty to mask their own failure and corruption. A hint here, a comment there, and voila, a culture of lying is created and incentivized.

Obscuring the truth is the ultimate short-term expediency. Now that it's serious, we have to lie. We'll start telling the truth later, we say, after everything's stabilized, we hope. But lying insures nothing can ever be truly stabilized, so there will never be a point at which the system is strong enough and stable enough to survive the truth.

We are now an empire of lies. The status quo,politically, socially and economically, depends on lies, half-truths, scapegoats and cover-ups for its very survival. Any truth that escapes the prison of lies endangers the entire rotten edifice.

In an empire of lies, leaders say what people want to hear. This wins the support of the masses, who would rather hear false reassurances that require no sacrifices, no difficult trade-offs, no hard choices, no discipline. The empire of lies is doomed. Lies are weakness, and they prohibit any real solutions. Truth is power, but we can no longer tolerate the truth because it frightens us. Our weakness is systemic and fatal."
Related:

"Figuring Forward in an Uncertain Universe"

"Figuring Forward in an Uncertain Universe"
by Maria Popova

"We make things and seed them into the world, never fully knowing - often never knowing at all - whom they will reach and how they will blossom in other hearts, how their meaning will unfold in contexts we never imagined. (W.S. Merwin captured this poignantly in the final lines of his gorgeous poem “Berryman.”)

Today I offer something a little apart from the usual, or sidelong rather, amid these unusual times: A couple of days ago, I received a moving note from a woman who had read "Figuring" and found herself revisiting the final page - it was helping her, she said, live through the terror and confusion of these uncertain times. I figured I’d share that page - which comes after 544 others (here are the first), tracing centuries of human loves and losses, trials and triumphs, that gave us some of the crowning achievements of our civilization - in case it helps anyone else.

Click image for larger size.

Meanwhile, someplace in the world, somebody is making love and another a poem. Elsewhere in the universe, a star manyfold the mass of our third-rate sun is living out its final moments in a wild spin before collapsing into a black hole, its exhale bending spacetime itself into a well of nothingness that can swallow every atom that ever touched us and every datum we ever produced, every poem and statue and symphony we’ve ever known - an entropic spectacle insentient to questions of blame and mercy, devoid of why.

In four billion years, our own star will follow its fate, collapsing into a white dwarf. We exist only by chance, after all. The Voyager will still be sailing into the interstellar shorelessness on the wings of the “heavenly breezes” Kepler had once imagined, carrying Beethoven on a golden disc crafted by a symphonic civilization that long ago made love and war and mathematics on a distant blue dot.

But until that day comes, nothing once created ever fully leaves us. Seeds are planted and come abloom generations, centuries, civilizations later, migrating across coteries and countries and continents. Meanwhile, people live and people die - in peace as war rages on, in poverty and disrepute as latent fame awaits, with much that never meets its more, in shipwrecked love.

I will die.

You will die.

The atoms that huddled for a cosmic blink around the shadow of a self will return to the seas that made us. What will survive of us are shoreless seeds and stardust."

Musical Interlude: Deuter, "Atmospheres"

Deuter, "Atmospheres"