Feb 252022
 
 February 25, 2022  Posted by at 9:50 am Finance Tagged with: , , , ,


Pablo Picasso Face female study 1925

 

Why I Blame The Arrogant, Foolish West (Peter Hitchens)
Russia Wanted Peace With Ukraine (Batko Milacic)
Moscow Claims This Is Culmination Of 8 Year Ukrainian War (RT)
Ukraine: What Will Be Done And What Should Be Done? (Palley)
US Biolabs in Ukraine (WarClandestine)
Another Biden/Blinken Blunder (Percy Allan)
How Ukraine Fits Into The Global Jigsaw (MacLeod)
Biden Reveals Update On Russia and SWIFT (RT)
COVID-19 Cases, Hospitalizations Jump Among Vaccinated: CDC Data (ET)
US Vaccination Rates Collapse As Omicron Subsides (ZH)
‘Scientific Fraud’: Drs. Robert Malone, Ryan Cole React To CDC Hiding Data (WND)

 

 

 

 

Dowd Highwire
https://twitter.com/i/status/1497025785307279362

 

 

What The Media Isn’t Telling You About Ukraine

 

 

‘We are turning our backs on the very people who mounted the greatest bloodless revolution in history to remove that Soviet regime.’

Why I Blame The Arrogant, Foolish West (Peter Hitchens)

We have been utter fools. We have treated Russia with amazing stupidity. Now we pay the price for that. We had the chance to make her an ally, friend and partner. Instead we turned her into an enemy by insulting a great and proud country with greed, unearned superiority, cynicism, contempt and mistrust. I have to endure, often several times a day, listening to people who are normally perfectly sensible and reasonable, raging wildly against Russia and Russians. Once, I was just like them. I had the normal anti-Russian prejudice of so many Western people. But, by great fortune, I am not like them now. I lived in Russia, I knew Russians as friends. I learned to distinguish between what was Russian and what was Communist. And I saw something most people will never see – a pivotal event in history, when we could have changed the world for the better.

[..] Interestingly the leading protesters against this Nato expansion were not Russian nationalists but highly intelligent and experienced independent figures. One was the Russian liberal politician Yegor Gaidar, a man Western leaders claim to have admired. He prophesied with total accuracy that the policy would strengthen hardliners and nationalists in the Kremlin. Then came the brilliant American diplomat George F. Kennan, a man nobody could accuse of being soft on Communism. But, unlike so many others, he could tell the new transformed Russia apart from the old USSR. Kennan had been architect of the USA’s policy of containment of the USSR. He came out of retirement to deplore Bill Clinton’s support for pushing Nato east. I quote his prediction at length because he was so right.

‘I think it is the beginning of a new Cold War,’ said Mr Kennan. ‘I think the Russians will gradually react quite adversely and it will affect their policies. ‘I think it is a tragic mistake. There was no reason for this whatsoever. No one was threatening anybody else. ‘This expansion would make the Founding Fathers of this country turn over in their graves. ‘We have signed up to protect a whole series of countries, even though we have neither the resources nor the intention to do so in any serious way. ‘[Nato expansion] was simply a light-hearted action by a Senate that has no real interest in foreign affairs. ‘What bothers me is how superficial and ill-informed the whole Senate debate was.’ He added: ‘I was particularly bothered by the references to Russia as a country dying to attack Western Europe.

‘Don’t people understand? Our differences in the Cold War were with the Soviet Communist regime.’ Exactly. After 1991 Russia had, for the first time since the Bolshevik putsch of 1917, got the chance to build a new and free society. As Mr Kennan put it, Nato expansion was an insult to Russian democrats. ‘We are turning our backs on the very people who mounted the greatest bloodless revolution in history to remove that Soviet regime.’ He asked why East-West relations should ‘become centred on the question of who would be allied with whom – and by implication against whom – in some fanciful, totally unforeseeable and most improbable future military conflict’. These questions demanded an answer, and never got one.

Read more …

Via the Saker.

Russia Wanted Peace With Ukraine (Batko Milacic)

Ukraine has been firmly in the U.S. geopolitical orbit since violent neo-Nazi protests in Kyiv’s Maidan Square resulted in the 2014 overthrow of the allegedly pro-Russian president, Viktor Yanukovych. Yet, Russia did not attempt to help the then-Ukrainian leader stay in power. As a result, anti-Russian forces came to power in Kyiv, leading the people of the Donbass region to vote in favor of leaving Ukraine. In 2014, Russia also recognized the results of the Ukrainian presidential election, organized by the post-Maidan authorities. Mr. Lavrov even called newly elected President Petro Poroshenko the “best chance” for Ukraine. Eight years later, Russia has completely changed its rhetoric on Ukraine. “I don’t think anyone can claim that the Ukrainian regime, since the 2014 coup d’état, represents all the people living on the territory of the Ukrainian state,” said Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov on February 22.

The reason for this change in Russian attitude is the acts that the Ukrainian government is committing against Russians and all other citizens who speak Russian in Ukraine. Ukraine waged a kind of “jihad“ against the Russian language and culture. From January 16, 2020, Ukraine translated all its services into Ukrainian by force of law. So: all shops, cafes and restaurants, banks and pharmacies had to comply with this shameful law. All employees have become obliged to communicate with customers – guests and clients – exclusively in Ukrainian. The Russian language has become completely banned. The mass media also came under attack from Ukrainization. Now, 75 percent of programs on national television are broadcasted in the Ukrainian language, and by 2024, the obligation will be – 90 percent.

All these actions of the Ukrainian government, which have clear elements of fascism, forced pro –Russian forces in Ukraine to react. That is why there were riots in Ukraine with the desire to separate large parts of the territory from Ukraine. It is clear to all analysts dealing with Ukraine that today’s Ukraine is United States instrument against Russia. The fact that Kiev received at least $200 million in U.S. “lethal aid” as well as other Western-made weapons over the past two months, means that Kiev rejects a peaceful solution. And Russian President Vladimir Putin has been offering this peaceful solution for years.

Such an operation undoubtedly means war. But war is inevitable, one way or another. Russia has deployed troops to the newly recognized Donbass republics. If Ukrainian forces do not end hostilities, the Russian Army is will to engage in a direct confrontation against Ukrainian army, in order to protect the innocent citizens of DNR and LNR. Sooner or later, the Donbass conflict will escalate. Shelling has increased along the entire front line, which seems to be part of preparations for a military offensive.

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Seems obvious.

Moscow Claims This Is Culmination Of 8 Year Ukrainian War (RT)

The West spent eight years ignoring the “sea of blood” in Donbass while arming Ukraine, and now claims Moscow is the aggressor when it stepped in to end the conflict, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova told RT on Thursday. Russian President Vladimir Putin announced a military operation in Ukraine in the early hours of Thursday, claiming it was necessary to “demilitarize and de-nazify” the neighbor. Kiev accused Russia of aggression, while the US, EU and NATO have called it an “unprovoked” invasion. Moscow insists this is not the case. In announcing the operation, Putin said the “main objective is to stop the escalation of the war that’s been going on for eight years, and to stop the war,” Zakharova told RT in an exclusive interview.

“Russia did not commit aggression of any kind,” Zakharova insisted. “This did not start yesterday. There’s a sea of blood that’s appeared over the past 8 years,” she added, referring to the conflict in the Donetsk and Lugansk regions, which Russia on Monday recognized as independent states. The main aim is to stop the escalation of the war that’s been going on for eight years, to stop this war Donetsk and Lugansk broke away from Ukraine in 2014, after the West-backed coup ousted the democratically elected government in Kiev. Zakharova noted that the two self-proclaimed republics held a referendum eight years ago, saying they did not want to remain in Ukraine, but both Moscow and the West rejected this and tried to put the “broken” country back together.

When asked about President Volodymyr Zelensky’s statement that Ukraine wanted peace, Zakharova wondered why Ukraine was arming itself and refusing to negotiate with the Donbass. “If Ukraine wanted peace, why did they get all these weapons” from all over the world, the Foreign Ministry spokeswoman told RT, adding, “It was clear that these were offensive weapons. Who were they fighting? Their own people in southeast Ukraine, and spoke often about seizing Crimea.” The peninsula voted to rejoin Russia in March 2014, but Ukraine and its Western backers have refused to recognize this, calling it an “annexation.” Zakharova also noted that the top Ukrainian officials have openly and publicly brought up the idea of obtaining nuclear weapons in recent weeks, pointing out this was a fact and not something claimed by Russian intelligence.

Divisions in Ukraine go beyond Donetsk and Lugansk, Zakharova added, accusing armed groups with Nazi-era symbols – such as the notorious Azov Battalion – of having influence over much of the country. For years, she said, Western media so concerned over human rights in places like South Sudan and Myanmar kept silent on all this, ignoring that more than 13,000 people have died in the Donbass – many of them civilians. While Russia provided them with humanitarian aid, Kiev besieged them by cutting off trade, finance, and even utilities. Zakharova noted that the water canal towards Crimea is now once again operational after Ukraine “criminally” shut it off years ago.

Read more …

“The Western media is now focusing attention on Russia’s invasion. Built into that focus is a tacit remaking of history. US Neocons want history to begin with the invasion.”

Ukraine: What Will Be Done And What Should Be Done? (Palley)

The starting point is recognizing that there is no going back in time. New facts have been created. They were created by NATO’s eastward expansion, by the 2014 US sponsored coup in Ukraine, by Russia’s reoccupation of Crimea, and now by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Next, there is need for a fundamental change of mind set that requires acknowledging Russia is not the Soviet Union. It is a weak economy with a declining population, and it has neither the capacity nor the desire to rule former Warsaw pact countries. With those two building blocks in place, the way forward can be mapped out. Ukraine must agree to permanently being a neutral state, as were Finland and Austria in the Cold War.

The US must stop arming Poland which is an intolerant nationalist polity that is likely to be a future source of major trouble. And the US must stop upgrading the military capabilities of the Baltic states which is an aggressive provocation. The European Union must build trade and commerce with Russia. That is an economic marriage made in heaven. Russia has resources and needs technology and capital goods. Europe has technology and capital goods and needs resources. Even better, by diminishing the threat against President Putin, such partnership will promote internal political improvement in Russia. Authoritarian regimes clamp down when threatened. They are more tolerant when unthreatened.

Now for the difficult part. The Ukraine should be reconstituted as a federal state, and it may even need to be partitioned given the new facts that have been created. With US encouragement, Ukraine played with fire and it has gotten burned. Lastly, there is need to build a Western European defense force and to diminish US military presence and influence in Western Europe. The US military was an essential presence in the Cold War when Western Europe lacked the capacity to deter the combined power of the Warsaw Pact. Those conditions are long gone. The Warsaw Pact no longer exists, and Russia is a shadow of the Soviet Union. Western Europe now dwarfs Russia in both economic and demographic terms, and it can (and should) look after itself.

[..] The Western media is now focusing attention on Russia’s invasion. Built into that focus is a tacit remaking of history. US Neocons want history to begin with the invasion. All else that went before is to be swept into Orwell’s “memory hole”. That means forgetting the injuries and threats the US has heaped on Russia for thirty years; forgetting how the US helped loot Russia after the fall of the Berlin Wall, forgetting the promise made not to expand NATO eastward, forgetting the threat posed by putting missile defense and launch capabilities close to Russia’s borders, and forgetting the fateful 2014 US sponsored coup in Ukraine.

Read more …

The Twitter account has apparently been suspended, but this thread remains.

US Biolabs in Ukraine (WarClandestine)

HOLY SHIT! I think I may be onto something about #Ukraine. Zelensky said the Russians are firing at “military installations”. How broad is that term? I am seeing speculation that could include US installed biolabs. At first I was like no way. Then I started digging. First I checked if the US even have biolabs in Ukraine. Turns out… we do. And in classic US fashion, it’s marketed as “defense”. “Biological Threat Reduction Program in Ukraine”. Studying the “most dangerous viruses in the world” at Russia’s border. Okay so we are studying the world’s most deadly pathogens at Russia’s border. It’s just for defense. Not that big of a deal right? WRONG. I didn’t know this until today, but Russia has been accusing US of creating “bio-weapons” at their border. WHAT!

And they have good reason to believe that, as the US NIH funded gain of function in Wuhan, then C19 “got out” and it ruined the world. Russia AND CHINA asked the UN for the US/allies to be “checked and limited” in bio capabilities 4 months ago! WHAT! DO YOU ALL KNOW WHAT THIS MEANS?! China and Russia indirectly (and correctly) blamed the US for the C19 outbreak, and are fearful that the US/allies have more viruses (bioweapons) to let out. THIS IS MASSIVE. Yet I’m disturbed that I had didn’t known about this 4 months ago. So how does that pertain to Ukraine? Well where in Ukraine are the “explosions” taking place.

Here’s a reported explosion in Lutsk. This is 75 miles inland in far western Ukraine. The opposite border of Russia… What does this have to do with Crimea/Donetsk in the east? Reportedly Kiev has seen missile strikes as well. At their airports and military installations. Kiev is also on the western side of Ukraine. Also a city the US GOV have confirmed the US have built biolabs in. Putin also continues to call it a “special military operation”. Says he wants to demilitarize and “denazify” the country but not occupy it. What does he mean by that? What is he really targeting? Yes, I know he targeted airports and military capabilities; but if Putin really believes, as his admin has stated publicly multiple times, that the US are creating bio weapons at Russia’s borders, then this entire situation could be WAY bigger.

[..] Here’s an overlap of reported missile strike locations and the biolab locations. Since the top map was made, more missiles hit Lviv as well. It certainly appears Putin is targeting the cities and locations with #USBiolabs present. He is 100% going after the alleged bioweapons.

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“The US and NATO refused to commit to defending Ukraine yet let the issue of NATO membership fester for 14 years.”

Another Biden/Blinken Blunder (Percy Allan)

As I expected, Russia has invaded Ukraine because both Ukraine and the West refused to preclude its membership of NATO. This has been a festering security issue for Russia since Ukraine applied for NATO membership in 2008 and George Bush Jnr supported its request. Since Ukraine is a bulwark between Russia and NATO Europe, its refusal to commit to being a neutral country like Finland, Sweden, Ireland, Austria, and Cyprus (each of whom belong to the EU, but not NATO) looks now to have consigned it to being a client state of Russia like Belarus. The US and NATO refused to commit to defending Ukraine yet let the issue of NATO membership fester for 14 years. Also, Ukraine never gave the two eastern provinces (parts of which broke away) the self-governing autonomy they were promised in the Minsk Agreements.

Biden and Blinken (an appropriate surname) will now notch up their second humiliating defeat following the US rout in Afghanistan. Ukraine could have become a Finland, but now is likely to end up being subjugated, or at least that half of it east of the Dnieper River. All very sad and avoidable if Russia’s fundamental grievance over NATO expanding to its border had been addressed. Putin’s aspiration for Ukraine re-joining Mother Russia is for domestic consumption, not its prime concern which was always security related. Thomas Friedman in a New York Times article titled “US not blameless in Putin’s war” quotes George Kennan, the architect of America’s successful containment of the Soviet Union, telling him that NATO’s expansion into Eastern Europe (while refusing Russian membership) was a mistake because it provoked a post-communist Russia to feel besieged.

Also, it amounted to overreach as NATO does not have the resources nor the intention to protect these states. When Cuba wanted to join the Warsaw Pact 60 years ago, America attempted an invasion (Bay of Pigs) and then threatened Russia with WWIII if it did not withdraw its missiles and armed forces. Now Russia is doing the same over Ukraine joining NATO, but Biden unlike Khrushchev did not heed the warning. The Democrats will pay a big electoral price on insisting Ukraine’s right to join NATO when they never had the intention of enforcing it. Sanctions are a bad joke, Russia has huge foreign exchange reserves, a big budget surplus and can get anything it needs from or through China. The only thing that might move Putin is the seizure of properties that Russian oligarchs own in London.

Read more …

Mackinder’s World Island.

How Ukraine Fits Into The Global Jigsaw (MacLeod)

Ukraine is part of a far bigger geopolitical picture. Russia and China want US hegemonic influence in the Eurasian continent marginalised. Following defeats for US foreign policy in Syria and Afghanistan and following Brexit, Putin is driving a wedge between America and the non-Anglo-Saxon EU. Due to global monetary expansion, rising energy prices are benefiting Russia, which can afford to squeeze Germany and other EU states dependent on Russian natural gas. The squeeze will only stop when America backs off. Being keenly aware that its dominant role in NATO is under threat, America has been trying to escalate the Ukraine crisis to suck Russia into an untenable occupation. Putin won’t fall for it. The danger for us all is not a boots-on-the-ground war — that’s likely to only involve the pre-emptive attacks on military installations Putin initiated last night — but a financial war for which Russia is fully prepared.

Both sides probably do not know how fragile the Eurozone banking system is, with both the ECB and its national central bank shareholders already having liabilities greater than their assets. In other words, rising interest rates have broken the euro system and an economic and financial catastrophe on its eastern flank will probably trigger its collapse. The developing tension over Ukraine is part of a bigger picture — a struggle between America and the two Eurasian hegemons, Russia and China. The prize is ultimate control over Mackinder’s World Island. Halford Mackinder is acknowledged as the founder of geopolitics: the study of factors such as geography, geology, economics, demography, politics, and foreign policy and their interaction.

His original paper was entitled “The Geographical Pivot of History”, presented at the Royal Geographical Society in 1905 in which he first formulated his Heartland Theory, which extended geopolitical analysis to encompass the entire globe. In this and a subsequent paper (Democratic Ideals and Reality: A study in the Politics of Reconstruction, 1919) he built on his Heartland Theory, and from which his famous quote has been passed down to us: “Who rules East Europe commands the World Island [Eurasia]; Who rules the World Island rules the World”. Stalin was said to have been interested in this theory, and while it is not generally admitted, the leaders and administrations of Russia, China and America are almost certainly aware of Mackinder’s theory and its implications.

Read more …

Moscow will not be cut off. How would Germany pay for its gas?

Biden Reveals Update On Russia and SWIFT (RT)

Speaking to the press after announcing new economic sanctions against Russia on Thursday, US President Joe Biden said that cutting Moscow off from the SWIFT payment system was not an action being taken at this time, adding that the latest measures were potentially of “more consequence.” “The sanctions that we have imposed on all their banks are of equal consequence or maybe more consequence than SWIFT, number one,” Biden said in response to a question about the proposal. “Number two, it is always an option but right now that is not the position the rest of Europe wishes to take,” he added.


Numerous calls have been made for Russia to be disconnected from the system – a key mechanism in facilitating financial transactions between banks around the world – particularly in the wake of Moscow’s attack on Ukraine on Thursday. Earlier in the day, UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced new wide-ranging sanctions against over 100 Russian individuals and entities, and said London was working with its NATO allies to cut Russia off from SWIFT.

Read more …

A long term trend by now.

COVID-19 Cases, Hospitalizations Jump Among Vaccinated: CDC Data (ET)

COVID-19 case and hospitalization rates increased among people who got a COVID-19 vaccine following the emergence of the Omicron virus variant, according to newly published data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). According to the data, which is submitted to the CDC by health departments across the country, the COVID-19 case rate in fully vaccinated people rose by more than 1,000 percent between Dec. 11, 2021, and Jan. 8, 2022. Fully vaccinated refers to people who received two doses of the Moderna or Pfizer COVID-19 vaccines, or the single-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine. The CDC doesn’t count a person as fully vaccinated until 14 days have elapsed from his or her final shot.


The case rate among those who also received a booster dose skyrocketed as well, rising some 2,400 percent between the same dates. While cases also rose among the unvaccinated, the jump in infections among the vaccinated closed the gap between the populations. As a result, people who haven’t received a vaccine were just 3.2 times more likely to test positive for COVID-19 in January. COVID-19-associated hospitalizations also increased among the vaccinated, from 1.4 per 100,000 for the fully vaccinated for the week ending Dec. 18, 2021, to 35.2 per 100,000 in the week ending Jan. 8, according to data from a surveillance system managed by the CDC.

Read more …

What is supposed to be the reason to get jabbed by now?

US Vaccination Rates Collapse As Omicron Subsides (ZH)

As cases of the already-more-mild Omicron strain of Covid-19 subside, vaccination rates in the United States are collapsing, according to AP, which reports that the vaccination drive in the US is ‘grinding to a halt,’ and ‘demand has all but collapsed’ – particularly in rural areas. At present, the average number of Americans getting their first dose is down to around 90,000 per day – the lowest point since the first few days of the vaccination campaign in December 2020 – while the outlook for any sort of substantial increase has largely evaporated. AP of course acts like this is a national tragedy led by toothless rednecks in ‘deeply conservative’ parts of the country, suggesting a ‘losing battle to get people vaccinated’ in rural Alabama – but of course the reality goes unmentioned… that the vaccine largely evades Omicron – which is far less deadly than previous strains, and is only marginally effective in keeping medically at-risk people from dying.


Even the Washington Post noted on Wednesday: “Coronavirus vaccine protection was much weaker against omicron, data shows.” “While coronavirus shots still provided protection during the omicron wave, the shield of coverage they offered was weaker than during other surges, according to new data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The change resulted in much higher rates of infection, hospitalization and death for fully vaccinated adults and even for people who had received boosters.” -WaPo Meanwhile, government vaccination incentive programs that gave away cash, beer, sports tickets and other prizes have also disappeared – while governnment and employer vaccine mandates have suffered blows in court. “People are just over it. They’re tired of it,” said Judy Smith, administrator for a 12-county public health district in northwestern Alabama.

Read more …

“We physicians and scientists have one responsibility, and one responsibility only, and that is the health and wellness of humanity..”

‘Scientific Fraud’: Drs. Robert Malone, Ryan Cole React To CDC Hiding Data (WND)

Urging CDC scientists to speak out, Dr. Robert Malone and Dr. Ryan Cole reacted Monday to the news reported by the New York Times that agency officials admit they have withheld COVID data broken down by age, race and vaccination status because the American people might misinterpret it. “This meets the criteria of scientific fraud,” said Malone, the key inventor of the mRNA technology platform used in the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines. “Withholding data is scientific fraud.” Cole, a Mayo Clinic-trained pathologist who runs a major diagnostic lab in Idaho, said that as “an ethical physician who took oaths to the human race, this is incredibly disturbing.” “These are the people that are entrusted to tell us the truth,” he said of the CDC officials.

The two outspoken medical scientists were featured at four sold-out events Sunday and Monday near Seattle hosted by a non-profit called One Washington that is helping equip parents, lawmakers and activists to counter moves by the state Board of Health to add the COVID-19 vaccine to the required shots for public school children. The Times reported the CDC “has been routinely collecting information since the Covid vaccines were first rolled out last year,” but the agency “has been reluctant to make those figures public, the official said, because they might be misinterpreted as the vaccines being ineffective.” The report said that “[t]wo full years into the pandemic, the agency leading the country’s response to the public health emergency has published only a tiny fraction of the data it has collected,” citing “several people familiar” with the withheld data.

“Much of the withheld information could help state and local health officials better target their efforts to bring the virus under control,” the Times said. Malone noted the Times quoted Samuel Scarpino, managing director of pathogen surveillance at the Rockefeller Foundation’s Pandemic Prevention Institute, saying the CDC “is a political organization as much as it is a public health organization.” He said the steps that it takes to get the data released “are often well outside of the control of many of the scientists that work at the C.D.C.” Malone said that what Scarpino essentially is saying is “that the governmental leadership of the CDC has stifled CDC scientists, in preventing them from disclosing key information to the public about the risks of the vaccine.”

“That is stunning,” he said. Malone said it’s “way past time” for CDC scientists and physicians to “come clean” and speak out. Cole agreed that they have “an ethical responsibility to humanity” to tell the American people what is going on. Last month, he testified with Malone and other physicians and scientists at a panel convened by Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., called “COVID-19: A Second Opinion.” Cole testified that he has observed in his lab over the past year a startling uptick in incidences of clotting, auto-immune diseases and cancers. “We physicians and scientists have one responsibility, and one responsibility only, and that is the health and wellness of humanity, no matter the inconvenient cost of telling that truth,” he said.

Kory/Alexander

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Home Forums Debt Rattle February 25 2022

Viewing 30 posts - 81 through 110 (of 110 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #102943
    aspnaz
    Participant

    @Red said:

    “A planet ever more battered by climate change, one in which neither an American nor a Chinese “century” will have any meaning, will certainly need a newly empowered world order that can supersede national sovereignty to protect the most fundamental and transcendent of all human rights: survival.

    Not the WEF global cooling/global warming/climate change fairy tale again. Was it the Davos crowd’s cut back on private jet/yacht/cars/jet skis etc carbon emissions that persuaded you? Maybe the Davos crowd selling off all their seaside properties persuaded you? The massive rise in seaside property insurance that persuaded you? Maybe it was the Davos crowd’s fleecing of the tax payer to fund new sources of energy provided by the Davos crowd that persuaded you?

    The aversion to critical thinking is the problem, not climate.

    #102944
    aspnaz
    Participant

    @Oroboros said:

    What upsets me about Ed Down and his follow hedge fund buddies is that his ‘revelation’ about the vaccines causing injury and death comes a year or so after anyone paying attention with the slightest curiosity figured it out.

    They are only doing it now because their clients have given the all clear …. they have sold their Pfizer shares, have taken their profits and will not pay any of the injury costs … classic reason why modern markets will always encourage corporate corruption.

    Of course, the system could be easily changed so that the share holders at the time of the offence were also liable, but then the elite criminal billionaires would not get so much corporate profit based on crime … nobody is interested in that.

    #102945
    those darned kids
    Participant

    you know what’s supercrazy?

    if they had just let trump do what he wanted – even though he really didn’t understand it – covid would have been over a long time ago..

    #102946
    those darned kids
    Participant

    vp: shave and a haircut..

    two bits! (i.e., two pieces of eight)

    #102947
    aspnaz
    Participant

    @Raul said:

    Art is a journey, for both the artist and for their viewers. In the end, though, art is about the heart, not the brain.

    It enriches our lives, how we receive those riches will differ, and some of those riches will not be appreciated as riches at all but as junk … such as Tracey Emin’s Bed. The great thing about art is that we are all entitled to appreciate it, or not appreciate it, in our own way, there is no right or wrong or way it should be done or any necessity to educate yourself with respect to art.

    When I look at a Rembrandt portrait I very rarely get any emotional reward but I am in awe of his talent and often wonder about the painting process, such as how much time was spent on painting the clothing versus the face. His technical ability was incredible and his physical painting talent is a revelation of the craftsmanship of which humans are capable. It doesn’t do much for my heart.

    #102948
    aspnaz
    Participant

    @kultsommer said:

    Right of anybody to have an (uneducated) opinion about anything cheapens that field of human endeavour

    You imply an uneducated opinion but retain the primary meaning of any opinion cheapens a field of endeavour. How can a positive (uneducated) opinion cheapen a field of endeavour? As with many art critics, much of what you say comes out the wrong end.

    #102949
    WES
    Participant

    Susmarie 108:

    While Canadian, I worked quite a few years in the American west. Loved it too! I have always been interested in history and geography.

    Your comment about northern California’s dry soil reminded me of what happened to the Myans in Mexico. When I visited their capital city, I was told the Myans had to abandoned it due to drought. The cause was likely a massive volcano to the west in Indonesia.

    The same volcano was also likely the cause for Ganghis Kahn being forced to move westward towards Europe and out of Mongolia. His people were horse herders and the climate changed, eliminating a type of grass that horses could eat, to that which only cattle could eat. The cattle herders began pushing them out.

    I remember in 1970s visiting a Pueblo ruins in south-west New Mexico, near the Arizona border, being excavated/studied by a professor. He thought the village had been abandoned due to drought as there were no signs of war or flash floods.

    I also visited another Pueblo village in south-west Colorado and again was told the cave protected village was likely abandoned due to drought.

    I think the entire south-western part of the US and prairies has always been prone to drought off and on throughout the ages. During my time out west, all I ever seem to hear was either no rain or too much rain!

    The song “It never rains in Southern California” comes to mind!

    #102950
    V. Arnold
    Participant

    aspnaz


    @kultsommer
    said:

    Right of anybody to have an (uneducated) opinion about anything cheapens that field of human endeavour

    Regardless of intent; Kultsommers comment was unkind, to say the least…

    Ilargi posts art every day for our appreciation; besides myself, it’s rare for anyone else to comment.
    I’ll continue to comment as is my wont…
    Much thanks to Apnaz for his spot on reply…

    #102951
    WES
    Participant

    When it comes to anything in 3D, whether art, drawings, maps, requires use of the brain imho.
    2D the heart can handle!
    3D the brain is required!
    For love, the heart needs the brain to malfunction!

    #102952
    V. Arnold
    Participant

    I knew a university art professor: we were at an art showing (at his university) and I asked him, what is art?
    His reply was: Art is whatever I say it is…
    I thought that pretty well summed it up…

    #102953
    WES
    Participant

    V. Arnold:

    Being an engineer, I am just too logical and practical to readily grasp the true meanings of most art. I either like it or I don’t. I rarely get it! I have none-the-less visited every major art museum in western Europe. Now Greece and Rome I got it!

    I had the same problem grasping the true meanings of Shakespeare, despite being waxxed philosophically to great heights by my English Literature teachers! I just figured they must have smoked a joint, before class, as I could never see it for the life of me!

    Now a robot I understand!

    #102954
    V. Arnold
    Participant

    Wes #102953
    Now a robot I understand!

    Lol; most of my working life has been as a machinist and a CAD engineer…
    …I got introduced to art early on; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City and the Guggenheim Museum…parents very much into the arts…
    …so, I just muddle through as best as I can…

    #102955
    those darned kids
    Participant

    https://westawake.substack.com/p/the-boy-with-a-racing-heart-part?utm_source=url

    Yeah, so she called the ambulance straight away. Luckily, The ambulance was there within a few minutes. They hooked him up to the ECG and they said in all of their years they had never seen anything like it. They had to record it as they didn’t think the consultants in the hospital would believe it. Because it was so, so, extreme and they considered it life threatening. His heart rate was at over 220 beats per minute.

    #102956
    Susmarie108
    Participant

    @WES: no doubt, drought has been a consistent feature over the ages here in the West/South-west. My commenting on now it is in response to the “in-real-time” experience in motion. I never thought that watching a large scale die off of Conifer trees would have such a great impact on my Heart. It feels like a slow motion disaster because it is a slow motion disaster everywhere you look. Am outside every day; there is no un-seeing or un-doing it. Just gotta work with it, like buying a highly efficient outdoor furnace (that utilizes wood) to power my boiler/radiant floor heated home. This is a practical and efficient way way to move the fuels from the ground into a productive purpose. Plus save $ on propane.

    Adapting. Accepting. Grieving. Letting go. Gratitude. Grace.

    @Dr. D: PERMACULTURE!

    #102957
    Susmarie108
    Participant

    Hey V. Arnold:

    it’s rare for anyone else to comment.

    Are you sure?

    @ aspanz:

    When I look at a Rembrandt portrait I very rarely get any emotional reward but I am in awe of his talent and often wonder about the painting process, such as how much time was spent on painting the clothing…

    Me too on the clothing part. In awe of the artist’s translation of fabric, expressed on canvas is remarkable.

    #102958
    kultsommer
    Participant

    @ Arnold
    I was trying to save you from looking like the “guy from the symphony lobby” that I created as a visual of what does it mean when somebody ventures into something that is beyond his or hers grasp. Do you think that is good to be like (ignorant) “him”? Remember, I did not use foul language, or course at you. If you want to be like “him” is up to you.
    Do not feel bad. There are academy educated artists who are lost when it comes to art work that is non-realistic. In your case I see that you are trying hard, so that’s good on your part.
    My reaction is no different than those of, say, passionate and knowledgeable stamp collector, car mechanic, baseball fan, nuclear physicist.. upon hearing an “opinion”.

    #102959
    kultsommer
    Participant

    @WES
    That’s right attitude of a person who is comfortable with in what he’s good at (and artists or art lovers are not).

    #102960
    kultsommer
    Participant

    @aspanz
    Unless you have comfortable understanding:
    Do you argue with an expert of economy of Bosnia between 1918 an 1945, and have your opinion?
    Or with quantum physicist who is telling you that you’re nothing but vibrating particles?
    Or….?

    #102961
    those darned kids
    Participant

    raúl: here’s some art for tomorrow’s rattle ;•]

    #102962
    those darned kids
    Participant

    hmmmm,

    #102963
    WES
    Participant

    Kultsommer:

    I don’t know if I am just a “vibrating particle” or not!
    But I am definately a “shivering particle” up here in Canada!
    Does that count?

    #102964
    WES
    Participant

    TDK:

    Very nice western mountain scene that I can personally relate to!
    Jackson Hole, Wyoming!
    And many other western locations too!

    #102965
    kultsommer
    Participant

    @WES
    Good one!
    Quantum physics at work ?
    That I do not know nothing about and, God forbid, comment further.

    #102966
    WES
    Participant

    Susmarie 108:

    You are taking a page out from Michael Reid in Newfoundland!

    #102967
    kultsommer
    Participant

    @TDK
    For April’s fool day I suggest Kinkade or Bob Ross.

    #102968
    kultsommer
    Participant

    @WE
    Double negative at my reply – no good on my part.
    Glad to see some action and comments dedicated to the FIRST thing of each daily.

    #102969
    Veracious Poet
    Participant

    Raul, check the server logs for sock puppets 😉

    #102979
    Dr. D
    Participant

    AU/AG may not have great fluctuations in Crypto terms, but has terrible volatility in relation to anything else – stocks, tech stocks, penny stocks, commodities, to say nothing of bonds. Not describing why, or that you could make as much as you lose on it, but it’s only stable in +year-chart terms.

    Worse than that, it’s a dead-loser vs inflation over MULTI-year times. Yes, in the 10-20 year horizon (or maybe the RIGHT 10-20 year picking start and endpoints) it is or has been better than the Dow, here we have two years just now with a dead loss. That’s IN inflation, and apparently IN a world war. So with inflation at 10%, gold is arguably losing money every day for years when you need to cash in a little for groceries, as your savings. It should be $20k and it’s not even $2k. Year after year, decade after decade.

    Note, with a 50% collapse, AND 6 years at the bottom of that collapse, gold is only where it was in 2011, 11 years ago. What’s inflation since then? 50%? I’m not against gold but you have to know what it can do and what it can’t. Cash wasn’t much better, simply losing 50% without the volatility, but this is the point to FORCE all humans, all human activity, and all human wealth into a giant casino, where professional gamblers can take a new crack at it every day. And the casino itself is crooked. That’s why I make a big deal out of it.

    Now, as by full force of government there is no value to money (i.e. interest rates) there is no value to human beings, as “money” is human work, human life, human ‘slavery’ in a sense, condensed to solid form. This means humans have no value to the system. That is true as humans, not only clearly being treated that way, but having no value in their work, have stopped selling it, and done a great walkaway, a very slow-gathering general strike. It’s amazing this signaling from one end actually causes real mirroring to the next side, down in human lives, but clearly it does. A cancer in the system, as lies are, spreading everywhere.

    With no human work, no human profit, there is no longer wages or sales either. The only industries are monopolies and government and financial money-printing, at least from what I can see. Or selling to the very wealthy and not working, wealthy from stock and housing gains, which are deeply unstable. And what do the very wealthy need to buy? Not much. They already own a boat and have a mowing service.

    But actual work? Mowing lawns, planting trees? Hahahaha. You’d make more money in 6 hours online trading. As long as it’s not work, you can make money. If it IS honest work, there’s no money.

    Trump did really understand this Covid. I’m not saying it’s genius; 1) he just calls in the weapons experts from Ft. Detrick and asks them about SARS and Covid. 2) Detrick and Army Doctors read him Fauci’s published paper from 2007 saying IVM/HCQ cures SARS, the closest cousin of Covid. 3) Then he gets on camera to test the waters and says we have like 4-5 potential cures maybe sorta mighta look into. 4) Media shouts down every and all cures/known therapies though written by Fauci himself, without looking into them, killing 100,000 from pure hate and partisanship, claiming Trump is no genius and no doctor. He’s not. He’s a manager who calls the talent into the room and asks their professional opinions. Note: the media is STILL screaming from that 1st day 2 years ago. Still. I’ve never seen anything like it, with any person, on any subject, ever. Never-ever. It makes the “3rd rail” of social security or racism look like a static shock from a doorknob. And the shouting and denial of Fauci’s published cure may have killed 90% of those Covid deaths, which Fauci says were all voluntary and preventable.

    It’s strange we have to qualify every statement with “I don’t like Trump, but” or “ He really didn’t know, it was a total accident (facts you/we couldn’t possibly know and never add concerning any other person), but” Why? Just be normal. Maybe he knew, maybe he didn’t. But it’s nearly impossible to belief he wouldn’t know and wouldn’t ask. Like impossible-level. I don’t say, “Well Trudeau is a jerk, but he likes bacon”. We just say the statement: “Trudeau likes bacon.” Not hard. Is this what makes Trump the sole special and unique person on planet earth right now? That every rule is more different for him than if he were the Pope or Emperor? Why? He’s just some Billionaire that was installed in an election.

    Neither good nor evil. Neither genius nor fool. Just a guy like you are.

    #102983
    those darned kids
    Participant

    “Just a guy like you are. ”

    no way! i’ll never, ever be in the wwe hall of fame (class of 2013).

    #102984
    those darned kids
    Participant

    kurtsommer: that is a bob ross classic.

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