Apr 032026
 


Vincent van Gogh The garden of the asylum at Saint-Rémy 1889


Elon Musk’s SpaceX Set To Go Public in $1 Trillion Share Listing (BBC)
Trump Fires Pam Bondi As Attorney General, Blanche To Be Acting AG’ (ZH)
Iran’s Friends To Make Life Much Harder For Israel And The US (Sadygzade)
The Price of Underestimating Iran (Lukyanov)
Mojtaba Breaks Silence, In Message Praises Hezbollah & Shia Leaders (ZH)
European Allies Show ‘Shock And Anxiety’ to Trump Threat to Leave NATO (JTN)
EU Leaders Utterly Bewildered at Energy Vulnerabilities Now Evident (CTH)
Could an Orban Win Trigger ‘Maidan on Steroids’? (RT)
Judge Keeps Democrats’ January 6 Witch Hunt Against Trump Alive (Margolis)
We May Finally Be Close to Ending the Democrats’ DHS Shutdown (Margolis)
AI Giant Anthropic Suffers Strategic Code Hemorrhage (RT)
Nano Nuclear Submits Construction Permit For Kronos Reactor In Illinois (ZH)
Artemis II and the ‘Waste of Space’ (Rick Moran)
The Soul-Crushing Cost of NOT Returning to the Moon for 50+ Years (Pinsker)

 


 

https://twitter.com/MichaelARothman/status/2039494266263867828?s=20 https://twitter.com/MrJohnJnr/status/2039319089810682219?s=20 https://twitter.com/PecanC8/status/2039361697069072753?s=20

 


 


Let’s open with the first trillionaire.

“Musk’s own holding in SpaceX would put the billionaire on track to become the world’s first trillionaire. ”

Well, he’s not yet. Maybe that’s a comfort to some..

The smartest man is also rhe richest?

Did you knowL there are only 20 or so countries in the world with a GDP over $1 trillion.

Elon Musk’s SpaceX Set To Go Public in $1 Trillion Share Listing (BBC)

Elon Musk’s SpaceX is poised to become one of the most valuable publicly traded companies in the world. The company, which manufactures rockets, space exploration technology and Starlink satellites, is currently privately held. But on Wednesday it made a confidential filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for an initial public offering, which would allow shares to be traded in the stock market. The value of SpaceX once it goes public is expected to surpass $1tn (£751bn). That would make its eventual stock market debut one of the most financially significant in history.


Musk’s own holding in SpaceX would put the billionaire on track to become the world’s first trillionaire. The company is aiming to officially go public sometime in June, according to reports in Bloomberg, Reuters and the New York Times. A confidential IPO filing with the SEC allows a company to avoid immediately revealing information to the public while it requests feedback from the regulator. The next step will be for company executives to hold “roadshows” – meetings with big investors to convince them to buy shares. By making shares of SpaceX available for purchase by the public, the company is looking to raise $50bn or more, according to the reports.

Earlier this year, SpaceX took over xAI, Musk’s artificial intelligence venture. After that all-stock merger, SpaceX is believed to have become the most valuable private company in the world, with an internal valuation of $1.25tn. Recently, Musk’s various companies have been becoming increasingly intertwined. Last year, xAI, best known for its chatbot Grok, took over X, the social media platform previously called Twitter that Musk bought in 2022. This degree of consolidation was a clear sign to investors that SpaceX was preparing to go public. Emily Zheng, a senior analyst at Pitchbook, earlier told the BBC that by bringing xAI under SpaceX, Musk could show potential investors that he was consolidating costs and able to easily share resources between his companies.

With its large-scale ambitions, SpaceX is in need of a massive cash infusion that going public can provide, Zheng added. The company is racing to keep up with the “sheer cost of compute, infrastructure, and energy” needed to expand, she said. Earlier this year, Tesla, Musk’s electric vehicle company, revealed it had invested more than $2bn in xAI. The billionaire said a significant share of Tesla’s manufacturing would begin to shift toward building robots, which would make use of xAI technology like Grok.Grok is already included in some Teslas as an AI assistant. SpaceX would also partner with Tesla and xAI in the massive chipmaking endeavour Musk announced last month, which he is calling Terafab. “

Tesla, xAI and SpaceX have all done amazing things that people did not think could be done before,” Musk said in a March presentation discussing Terafab. Musk started SpaceX in 2002 with the aim of reducing the cost of launching crafts into space, mainly by making rockets that could be launched more than once. It first contracted with Nasa in 2006. Today, most of SpaceX’s work continues to revolve around rockets and the operation of Starlink, a fleet of satellites offering internet connectivity across the globe. But Musk often discusses grander ambitions for the company, including putting data centers needed for AI in space and building a self-sufficient city on Mars, which many experts have said could be impossible to realise.

Read more …

Epstein victim?!

Trump Fires Pam Bondi As Attorney General, Blanche To Be Acting AG’ (ZH)

President Donald Trump has ousted Attorney General Pam Bondi, multiple outlets report. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche is serving as acting AG in the interim. The move comes amid White House frustration with Bondi’s leadership at the Justice Department – particularly her handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files and what Trump viewed as insufficient aggression in targeting his political opponents. Trump had privately discussed firing her and floated EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin (or Blanche) as a possible replacement. Bondi met with Trump in the Oval Office Wednesday night ahead of his speech to the nation on the war in Iran, where she reportedly was informed of her ouster, according to two sources familiar with the meeting.


One of those sources said that by the time Trump took his place behind the podium for the address, Bondi already lost her job and was on her way back to Florida. -Fox News.And according to the WSJ, Trump weighed firing her in January but was persuaded not to do so. In a Thursday statement, Trump called Bondi “a Great American Patriot and a loyal friend, who faithfully served as my Attorney General over the past year,” adding “she will be transitioning to a much needed and important new job in the private sector, to be announced at a date in the near future, and our Deputy Attorney General, and a very talented and respected Legal Mind, Todd Blanche, will step in to serve as Acting Attorney General.”

Earlier:
Leaky little sharks are circling in DC – telling the NY Times and CNN that Pam Bondi may soon be out as Attorney General, and replaced with EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin. The frustration, per sources close to the White House cited by The New York Times and CNN, centers squarely on Bondi’s catastrophic mishandling of the Jeffrey Epstein files – a saga ZeroHedge has chronicled in excruciating detail as one of the most embarrassing self-inflicted wounds of the second Trump term. Recall Bondi’s infamous February 2025 Fox News appearance where she claimed the “client list” was literally “sitting on my desk right now to review.” Fast-forward months later: no list, endless redactions for “national security,” millions more pages “discovered” at the 11th hour, and zero indictments of any high-profile co-conspirators.

Beyond her disastrous testimony in front of the House Judiciary Committee in February – the House Oversight Committee has also subpoenaed her over the “troubling disappearance” of documents, with her deposition still looming on April 14. Even Trump ally and White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles admitted Bondi “completely whiffed” the response.

Trump is also reportedly pissed that Bondi has an apparent allergy to actual justice – namely, her failure to deliver on promises to go after his political foes (former FBI Director James Comey or New York AG Letitia James). Bondi’s DOJ has also been dragging its feet on broader accountability: no real movement on COVID-era prosecutions despite the obvious targets, a bizarre pivot toward “hate speech” crackdowns that even drew fire from the right, and a general pattern of not prosecuting what many see as a laundry list of potential criminals from the prior regime. Perhaps it was all by design. Either way, looks like Pam’s time is short.

What’s more, Bondi’s DOJ has been actively sabotaging the Trump coalition by maintaining Biden-era policies in court – rpeatedly mooting litigation on key issues rather than letting judges deliver precedent-setting knockout blows, defending outdated gun control measures like the 1934 National Firearms Act in suppressor cases, and choosing temporary tactical retreats over permanent wins that would prevent future Democrat administrations from simply flipping the switch back on.

Bondi’s nightmare before Congress was more or less the crescendo of her implosion. On February 11, she was hauled before the House Judiciary Committee for what was supposed to be a straightforward oversight hearing – and instead delivered one of the most disastrous performances in recent memory. As we reported live, Bondi exploded into a full-blown shouting match with Rep. Thomas Massie and top Democrats, dodging more than a dozen direct questions on why – after months of “reviewing” the files – the DOJ still had zero indictments of Epstein’s high-profile co-conspirators.

https://twitter.com/DerrickEvans4WV/status/2021639156611629391

She hemmed and hawed over the selective redactions (victims’ names left exposed while alleged abusers were blacked out), the sudden “discovery” of a million more pages, and the complete lack of accountability for the powerful men who enabled the operation. At one point she even whipped out what insiders called a “burn book” of lawmakers’ search histories in a desperate whataboutism that backfired spectacularly, drawing jeers from Epstein survivors seated in the gallery. So basically an angry stonewalling with clips that went absolutely viral. The base watched in real time as the woman tasked with draining the swamp instead looked like she was guarding it.

The timing is telling. Rumors of Bondi’s exit have swirled for months, but they intensified this week after Trump met with Zeldin (a reliable MAGA foot soldier who ran New York and has been showered with praise by the president for his EPA work). Bondi was still glued to Trump’s side yesterday – riding in the motorcade to Supreme Court arguments and sitting in the audience for his primetime Iran address – but the non-denial denial from the White House speaks volumes: “Attorney General Pam Bondi is a wonderful person and she is doing a good job.” AKA – “you’re on thin ice.”

Zeldin, for his part, has zero of the Epstein baggage and a track record of hawkish loyalty during Trump’s first term. If the move happens, it would mark the second high-profile Cabinet shakeup of the term after Kristi Noem’s ouster at DHS – a clear signal that even Trump is no longer willing to tolerate the kind of institutional inertia and base-alienating fumbles that defined too much of his first go-around.

For now, Bondi remains in place… but the clock is ticking. As one person familiar with the discussions put it, the Epstein fallout has become a genuine political liability.

Read more …

The reason to attack them.

Iran’s Friends To Make Life Much Harder For Israel And The US (Sadygzade)

The war’s second ‘ring of fire’ is no longer forming around Iran. It is already there. What we are witnessing is not a limited clash between a state under pressure and its immediate enemies, but the gradual emergence of a wider regional confrontation in which Tehran’s allied forces are moving from symbolic solidarity to practical engagement. In Lebanon, Iraq, and now once again in Yemen, groups aligned with Iran are opening new fronts and making any American or Israeli campaign far more difficult to execute. If Iran cannot stop pressure by matching superior military power plane for plane or missile for missile, it can still answer by stretching the battlefield across time and space.


That is the real significance of the current escalation. Wars are easiest to sell and easiest to sustain when they look concentrated, technically manageable, and politically clean. They become much harder to continue when every strike produces another zone of instability, when every advance prompts retaliation, and when every promise of decisive success runs into a new and costly complication. Iran and the forces loyal to it understand this perfectly well. Their goal is not necessarily to win a spectacular conventional victory over Israel or the US. They are trying to deprive their adversaries of a quick result, to turn military superiority into strategic over-extension, and to make the price of escalation rise with every passing week.

Israel is getting mired in Lebanon
Lebanon has become the clearest example of this dynamic. Israel entered the confrontation with Hezbollah expecting that greater firepower, harsher pressure, and deeper incursions would eventually impose a new reality in the south of the country. But so far the campaign has not produced the kind of result Israeli leaders would need in order to claim genuine success. Israeli officials are still speaking openly about expanding operations and about the need for a broad security zone in southern Lebanon. That does not sound like a completed military mission. It sounds like a campaign still searching for a workable outcome.

Israel remains capable of inflicting enormous damage on Lebanon. It can devastate border villages and infrastructure, and force large numbers of people from their homes. But the ability to destroy is not the same as the ability to impose control. A military campaign can appear overwhelming on television and still fail to neutralize the armed force it was meant to break. Hezbollah remains capable of hitting Israeli territory, and that single fact tells us that the war in Lebanon has not been resolved in Israel’s favor.

Israel is also suffering losses, not only in military terms but in political and psychological terms. Reports of fallen soldiers and continuing battlefield casualties show that Hezbollah is still able to turn southern Lebanon into a dangerous combat zone for the Israeli army. This is important because Israel’s military doctrine relies heavily on speed, on offensive initiative, and on the demonstration of dominance. A campaign that drags on, consumes manpower, exposes soldiers to attrition, and leaves northern Israel under continuing threat is not simply unfinished. It becomes strategically corrosive. It undermines the image of effortless superiority on which deterrence partly depends.

There is also the issue of equipment and operational pressure. Public claims about destroyed Israeli vehicles are often difficult to verify independently, and any serious analysis should avoid repeating battlefield propaganda as fact. But even without dramatic and unverifiable numbers, the broader reality is evident.

Read more …

“The United States desperately needs a decisive victory in its war ..”

The Price of Underestimating Iran (Lukyanov)

The outcome of the war with Iran will determine America’s capabilities on the world stage for years to come. That is what makes the current conflict in West Asia so consequential, far beyond the region itself. US policy toward Iran has become increasingly erratic. Rather than focus on the president’s shifting rhetoric, it is more useful to examine the logic underpinning the confrontation. Washington appears to have convinced itself that the moment is right to act decisively against Tehran, exploiting what it perceives as a window of vulnerability.


The objective, viewed in isolation, has a certain cold rationality. A single, well-executed strike could, in theory, achieve several long-standing goals at once: settle the historical grievance of the 1979 embassy crisis, remove a regime seen as hostile to Israel, gain leverage over key energy resources and transport routes, and weaken emerging Eurasian integration projects. Advisers appear to have presented this as a rare opportunity. The president accepted the argument. But such ambitions rest on a fundamental miscalculation. Iran is not Iraq in 2003, nor Afghanistan in 2001. Its military capabilities are far more substantial than those of any adversary the United States has confronted directly in recent decades. It is a large, resilient state with deep strategic depth and a capacity to inflict serious disruption on global trade and energy flows.

This last point is critical. Iran’s geographic position gives it leverage that few countries possess. Even limited escalation could threaten shipping routes and economic stability far beyond the Middle East, directly affecting the interests of the United States and its allies. That reality alone complicates any attempt at a quick, clean victory.Moreover, the political context is very different from past US interventions. The current display of force, lacking even the formal justifications that accompanied earlier campaigns, has unsettled Washington’s partners. Allies that might once have felt compelled to support the United States are now more hesitant, weighing the risks of involvement against uncertain outcomes.

The original assumption appears to have been that Iran would capitulate quickly. What that capitulation would look like was never entirely clear: regime collapse, coerced compliance along the lines of Venezuela, or a negotiated settlement sharply limiting Tehran’s power. In any case, a prolonged conflict was not part of the plan.= Now that the conflict has dragged on, a more fundamental question has emerged: what exactly constitutes success?

This dilemma reflects a broader shift in American foreign policy. “America First” is often interpreted as isolationism or restraint. In practice, it has meant something else entirely, the pursuit of US objectives without responsibility and, ideally, without cost. The underlying principle is simple: achieve maximum benefit while minimizing commitments. For a time, this approach appeared to work. In his first year, Donald Trump managed to pressure partners into accepting American terms, often by leveraging overwhelming economic power. But that strategy depends on the absence of meaningful resistance. It becomes far more dangerous when applied to a situation that cannot be controlled.

Creating a major geopolitical crisis and expecting others to absorb the consequences while Washington extracts advantages is a different proposition altogether. It risks destabilizing not just adversaries, but the entire system in which the United States itself operates. In earlier decades, US leadership was framed in terms of a “liberal world order,” where advancing American interests was presented as beneficial to all. The concept of a “benevolent hegemon” emerged from this period. Trump’s worldview rejects that premise. Instead, it assumes that US prosperity must come at the expense of others, and that it is time to reverse the old balance.

This shift carries profound implications. A hegemon that no longer seeks to provide stability must rely more heavily on coercion. But coercion, to be effective, requires credibility. The dominant power must demonstrate clearly that it can impose its will when necessary.

Iran has become the test case.

Read more …

Recently someone wrote it would be incorrect to label him “ayatollah”. Anyone remember who?

Mojtaba Breaks Silence, In Message Praises Hezbollah & Shia Leaders (ZH)

The new, younger Ayatollah Khamenei – who may have been wounded in the early days of US-Israeli strikes, hasn’t been seen in any public way, not even on TV, throughout the war. There have not so much as been any official recent images of him circulated. But Mojtaba Khamenei has apparently been issuing some limited written statements, mainly encouraging foreign proxies in their joining the war against US and Israeli forces in the region. State media has indicated he’s not making public appearances given the ongoing relentless bombing campaign and the Islamic Republic’s wartime footing.


After a long period of relative silence, a message from Khamenei was publicized on Monday. In the message attributed to him, he “expressed his appreciation to the supreme religious authority (in Iraq) and the people of Iraq for their clear stance against aggression against Iran and their support for our country,” Iran’s ISNA news agency said, referring to the Iraq-based Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani. Sistani is based in Iraq and has long been a highly revered Shia cleric in the region.

The 56-year old Khamenei has on Wednesday apparently broken his silence again, this time praising Hezbollah for joining the war against Israel. Hezbollah has been launching hundreds of rockets on northern and central Israel, amid an emerging ground campaign in southern Lebanon, also as Israel bombs Beirut from the air.In the new words carried by Iranian state media, he praised Hezbollah for its “perseverance, steadfastness and patience” against “the most ruthless enemies of the Islamic world.”

Meanwhile, the CIA and Mossad are said to be trying to uncover Mojtaba Khamenei’s whereabouts and status. His 86-year old father did not appear to have been in hiding at all when he was slain by airstrike on the very first day of Operation Epic Fury.

The most likely explanation could be that the younger Khamenei is directing the war from a much more secure and hidden setting, for example a deep underground bunker – or in a remote part of the country. But some analysts have questioned why he wouldn’t make a video address, even if pre-recorded, offering to the world proof that he is a alive and is running the country and war. As for the most visible day-to-day leader, this is parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf.

Read more …

A.K.A. Shock and Awe.

European Allies Show ‘Shock And Anxiety’ to Trump Threat to Leave NATO (JTN)

European media responded to President Donald Trump’s remarks about the United States leaving NATO as an “existential threat” to the 77-year-old security alliance. Speaking with The Telegraph, a right-of-center British daily newspaper, Trump called the alliance a “paper tiger” and said he was “strongly considering” withdrawing from the 32-nation pact. Trump’s comments come after repeated criticisms of NATO member states for not joining the Israeli- and U.S.-led conflict with Iran. In the latest developments, Spain, France, and Italy refused U.S. access to their military bases or airspace for military actions against Iran.


“I was never swayed by NATO,” Trump said. “I always knew they were a paper tiger, and [Russian President Vladimir] Putin knows that, too.” Thirty of 32 NATO member states are in Europe (the U.S. and Canada are the exceptions). Israel is not a member of the alliance. The Guardian, another U.K. newspaper, said Trump’s remarks represented an “existential threat” that could be the “worst crisis in NATO history.” In Spain, El País said there was “shock and anxiety across Europe.” Among the European Union’s three largest economies, German media stressed that the Israeli and U.S. bombings of Iranian targets were “not our war” and said it was “correct” for the government to reject U.S. demands for support.

French media pursued a similar line, stressing that NATO was created to assure trans-Atlantic security, not offensive missions in the Middle East. Italy, meanwhile, tried to balance ties with the U.S. and European and NATO allies, trying to organize a coalition to discuss strategies to assure security in the Gulf region without entering the conflict. Trump might not be able to follow through on his threat to leave the NATO alliance due to a 2023 U.S. law that “prohibits any withdrawal from NATO” without approval from two-thirds of the U.S. Senate.

Read more …

More Shock and Anxiety.

EU Leaders Utterly Bewildered at Energy Vulnerabilities Now Evident (CTH)

They stopped their oil and gas exploration. They chose to chase ‘net zero’ academic pontifications. They closed their refining operations. They took apart their coal-fired electricity plants. They disassembled their nuclear power capabilities. Then, the absolute cherry on the proverbial cake, they voted to stop purchasing oil and gas from Russia.The EU is now in the Find Out stage of their FAFO positioning. Gasoline prices have skyrocketed. The last shipments of jet fuel have arrived. Major airline carriers are cancelling flights due to lack of fuel. Faster than the EU can organize meetings to discuss their position, EU destined LNG shipments have diverted to southeast Asia and India as the ASEAN nations bid higher purchase prices for the vessels literally on the water.


Folks, it’s quite an article written by EU Politico as they outline how each of the leaders from the nation states are now discussing how vulnerable they are to the changed oil/gas environment with the mid east conflict ongoing. The entire energy sector in Europe is now in crisis mode with leaders predicting it will get much worse within days, not weeks.mEU Politico – “Germany’s Friedrich Merz warns the economic fallout from the war in Iran is on track to rival that of the Covid pandemic or the Russian invasion of Ukraine. […] With the war in Iran threatening to choke off energy flows for the foreseeable future, Europe is facing a supply shock that promises to cripple manufacturing, ground airlines, hike up the price of food, spike borrowing costs and send inflation spiraling back to crisis levels.

As the last tankers carrying fossil fuels from the Persian Gulf pull into European ports, the scale of what is about to hit seems to be dawning on the continent’s leaders. “I’m living with the reality of this war and its consequences 24 hours a day,” Italian Defense Minister Guido Crosetto told the La Repubblica newspaper. “I’m forced to know things that don’t let me sleep.” The conflict could last “years,” Christine Lagarde, the president of the European Central Bank, warned in an interview with the Economist last week. The long-term effects, she added, are “probably beyond what we can imagine at the moment.”

[…] “Markets are now grappling with a scenario long discussed in theory but rarely thought of as a legitimate possibility — the effective shutdown of the world’s most critical energy chokepoint,” said Ana Maria Jaller-Makarewicz, lead energy analyst for the Europe team at the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis.One immediate worry is that Asian countries, which before the war relied on the Gulf for some 80 percent of their gas and oil, are beginning to bid up the price of those products as they fight over dwindling supplies. That has diverted merchants with more flexible contracts toward Asia to exploit the higher profit margins, turning them away from Europe.

According to Charles Costerousse, a senior energy analyst at maritime consultancy Kpler, 11 U.S.- and Nigerian-flagged LNG tankers have been redirected from Europe to further east in the past few days. Within the next few days, the last tanker bearing Qatari LNG will arrive in Europe, he said.[…] For now, as the final Gulf tankers finish unloading their cargo this week, the clock officially starts ticking for Europe’s policymakers. The continent has weeks, not months, to brace for an impact that could reshape its economy for a generation. (read more)

The one element missing from the lengthy diatribe of EU leader quotes is any self-reflection; any admission their EU vulnerability was entirely driven by their own policies. No, that part of the equation is missing entirely. Everything in their mindset is a discussion of external events happening to them. There is no reconsideration of their prior stupidity, and/or a responsive effort to reposition their vulnerability. The EU is in a state of cognitive paralysis, and things are about to get much, much worse.


Read more …

Could it trigger the end of the EU?

Could an Orban Win Trigger ‘Maidan on Steroids’? (RT)

Polls ahead of the Hungarian elections point to an opposition victory, but players behind the scenes expect Prime Minister Viktor Orban to come out on top. Others say it’s a scenario ripe for a Kiev-style ‘color revolution’. With two weeks to go until Hungary’s parliamentary elections, Orban is facing the most credible threat to his power yet. Opposition leader Peter Magyar’s Tisza party is currently leading Orban’s Fidesz by 15 points, according to an aggregate of polls compiled by Politico. When looking at pollsters linked to Tisza or funded by the EU, the results are even more stark. A poll by the opposition-linked Median, for example, shows Tisza a whole 23 points ahead of Fidesz, at 58-35%.

However, Politico has also reported that “many” EU leaders secretly believe an Orban victory is “likely.” Hungarian EU Affairs Minister Janos Boka thinks that the disparity between public surveys and private sentiment is no accident, and that by skewing polls, Magyar and his allies in Brussels are “building the narrative that if they lose the election, then this is an illegitimate result.” Notorious intervention hawk Michael Weiss put Boka’s worries into words last week. “If Orban tries to steal this – and he almost certainly will – it’ll be Euromaidan on steroids in an EU/NATO country. Watch closely, America,” he warned in a post on X.

Weiss, who previously ran a Ukraine regime change outfit he claimed was journalism, was referring to the post-election coup that toppled a democratically elected president, Viktor Yanukovich, in 2014. Orchestrated by the US, the Maidan/Euromaidan coup set in motion a chain of events that culminated in the Russia-Ukraine conflict, which has claimed hundreds of thousands of lives.However, there are some fundamental points war hawks in armchairs would like you not to notice; differences between Budapest and Kiev that would make forced regime change a far more difficult prospect if Orban wins.

How the US masterminded Maidan
Presented by Western media as a popular uprising, the ‘Maidan’ revolution was a creation of the US State Department and run out of a very compliant US embassy. The National Endowment for Democracy (NED), a State Department sub-agency, pumped around $14 million into Ukrainian activist groups from 2011 to 2014, the US embassy funded pro-Maidan media outlets, and between 1991 and 2014, the US funnelled a total of $5 billion into “democracy-building programs in Ukraine,” a State Department spokesperson said in 2014.

The NED boasted in a 2015 report that US-funded organizations “played important roles in the peaceful protests in Kiev.” By the time the report had been published, the “peaceful protests” had descended into a bloodbath, with Western-funded far-right militias massacring nearly 100 pro-Western protesters in a false-flag operation, and pro-Western neo-Nazis burning 46 anti-Maidan protesters alive at the Trade Unions House in Odessa. Awkward questions for the neocons, neolibs, and the righteous.

Assistant Secretary of State for Europe Victoria Nuland promised military aid and a billion-dollar loan to opposition politicians, and famously handed out cookies to pro-Western activists in Kiev. Together with US Ambassador Geoffrey Pyatt, she helped choose the government that would replace Yanukovich’s. When asked by an obsequious Pyatt in a 2014 phone call if the Europeans might disagree with her choice of candidate, the notorious hawk infamously declared “f**k the EU.”

Now the US backs Orban
The situation in Hungary is radically different. US President Donald Trump is a staunch ally of Orban, and has endorsed the Hungarian PM’s reelection campaign, while Vice President J.D. Vance is scheduled to make a high-profile trip to Budapest just days before the April 12 election.

Read more …

“Even though Trump’s team can appeal, the damage is real. This ruling will probably keep Trump tangled in civil litigation for the rest of his presidency and likely beyond..”

Judge Keeps Democrats’ January 6 Witch Hunt Against Trump Alive (Margolis)

A federal judge appointed by Barack Obama ruled this week that President Trump’s speech at the Ellipse on January 6, 2021, is not protected by presidential immunity — keeping a Democratic-driven civil lawsuit alive and ensuring Trump will be fighting this battle for years to come. U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta ruled that Trump’s rally remarks fell outside the “outer perimeter” of his official presidential duties, applying the framework the Supreme Court established in its immunity ruling back in 2024. That ruling gave presidents full immunity for core official acts and presumptive immunity for acts within the outer perimeter — but left unofficial acts exposed. Mehta used that opening to let this bogus lawsuit walk right through.


Mehta was nominated to the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia by Obama in 2014 and confirmed the same year. In 2021, he was appointed to the U.S. Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, succeeding Judge James Boasberg, who served as presiding judge from 2020 to 2021. It sure is a small world when it comes to Obama-era appointees making consequential rulings against a Republican president.

It should come as no surprise that this is not Mehta’s first rodeo targeting Trump. He previously refused to dismiss these same claims back in February 2022, ruled against Trump in a case involving congressional access to his financial records, and sentenced former Trump adviser Peter Navarro to four months in jail for defying a January 6 committee subpoena. Mehta has had his fingerprints on the anti-Trump legal machine for years.

Mehta denied Trump’s motion to dismiss the civil litigation, meaning Democratic lawmakers and Capitol Police officers who sued Trump can continue to pursue their case. The plaintiffs falsely claim Trump’s Ellipse speech incited the crowd to riot. The problem with their claim, of course, is Trump’s speech itself. Trump literally told the crowd at the Ellipse to “peacefully and patriotically make your voices heard.” That’s the “incitement” Democrats keep telling us about. The speech itself is the best evidence that the insurrection narrative is a myth, but Mehta waved that aside anyway.

Joseph Sellers, an attorney for the Democratic lawmakers suing Trump, couldn’t contain his excitement. “We’re very pleased that the court recognized that President Trump cannot avoid accountability for his conduct on Jan. 6, 2021,” he said. “This decision, if it holds up, is going to pave the way to a trial in federal district court on these claims.”Trump’s legal team made it clear they’re not done fighting this.

“The facts show that on January 6, 2021, President Trump was acting on behalf of the American people, carrying out his official duties as President of the United States,” the team said in a statement. “President Trump will continue to fight back against the Democrat Witch Hoaxes and keep delivering historic results for the American People.”

Even though Trump’s team can appeal, the damage is real. This ruling will probably keep Trump tangled in civil litigation for the rest of his presidency and likely beyond — precisely what Democrats designed these lawsuits to accomplish. While the president focuses on governing and delivering results for the American people, a group of partisan plaintiffs and their enabling activist judges are still obsessed with their January 6 lies.

Read more …

Too small brains.

We May Finally Be Close to Ending the Democrats’ DHS Shutdown (Margolis)

The Democrats’ DHS shutdown may finally be ending soon, after Republican leaders and President Donald Trump hashed out a plan. The two-track strategy announced Wednesday strips the left of one of its most effective tools for obstruction — and leaves them with nobody to blame but themselves.


The partial shutdown has dragged on since mid-February, making it the longest of its kind in American history. The core fight came down to one thing: Democrats refused to fund Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Border Patrol after two anti-ICE agitators attacked federal agents and were killed in self-defense. The left, blaming the agents for the deaths, demanded reforms that would have effectively made immigration law unenforceable. Republicans wouldn’t budge. Then Democrats finally caved last week, agreeing to fund DHS without the reforms they had demanded. But House Speaker Mike Johnson rejected the deal because it didn’t fully fund ICE and Border Patrol, which were already funded through 2029.

Trump broke the logjam Wednesday with a Truth Social post endorsing funding ICE and Border Patrol through budget reconciliation — the legislative process that will bypass Senate Democrats entirely. “We are going to work as fast, and as focused, as possible to replenish funding for our Border and ICE Agents, and the Radical Left Democrats won’t be able to stop us,” Trump wrote.

Speaker Mike Johnson, who initially opposed the funding deal announced Friday, and Senate Majority Leader John Thune quickly got on board. Their joint statement outlined the two-pronged approach: fund most of DHS through the standard appropriations process until October, then lock in three years of immigration enforcement funding through reconciliation — completely insulated from Democratic obstruction. “In the coming days, Republicans in the Senate and House will be following through on the President’s directive by fully funding the entire Department of Homeland Security on two parallel tracks: through the appropriations process and through the reconciliation process,” they said.

The Senate Budget Committee had already begun building the reconciliation framework to make it happen. That process allows the Senate to move legislation with a simple majority instead of the 60-vote threshold that typically gives Schumer and his caucus veto power over Republican priorities. This plan looks almost identical to what the Senate tried to pass just last Friday — the same bill House Republicans shot down in spectacular fashion, with Johnson himself calling it a “joke.” House conservatives had demanded that immigration enforcement funding stay bundled with the rest of DHS appropriations.

Johnson’s reversal also signals something significant. I previously wrote that Johnson may have been attempting to force the Senate GOP to nuke the filibuster. If that were the case, this agreement would mean Republicans have effectively conceded that nuking the Senate filibuster isn’t happening. If killing the filibuster were on the table, there would be no need for a two-track workaround. The reconciliation path is a creative solution, but it’s also an acknowledgment of the limits of the current Senate majority.

“It is now abundantly clear that Democrats place allegiance to their radical left-wing base above all else,” Thune and Johnson said. “We cannot allow Democrats to any longer put the safety of the American public at risk through their open border policies, so we are taking that off the table.” If Republicans can push the reconciliation package through, Democrats will lose the ability to use DHS appropriations as a weapon against Trump’s immigration agenda for the rest of his term. They spent months blocking ICE funding to protect their base, and now they may end up with zero leverage to show for it.

Read more …

We have questions.

AI Giant Anthropic Suffers Strategic Code Hemorrhage (RT)

AI giant Anthropic has mistakenly published its own top secret internal code, triggering a viral wave of github rewrites and inflicting potentially catastrophic commercial damage on the Amazon-backed business model. The developer of the Claude chatbot described the incident as a release issue “caused by human error, not a security breach,” according to US technology news website VentureBeat on Tuesday. Anthropic was designated a “risk to national security” by US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth in February after disagreements with the Pentagon over the use of its artificial intelligence systems.


The leak involved more than 500,000 lines of code linked to Claude Code, Anthropic’s AI coding assistant, which helps users write and manage software through natural language commands, according to Axios and The Verge. The material included unreleased features, performance data, and developer notes. The code spread rapidly online, with versions of the code being placed on code-sharing platform GitHub and replicated thousands of times within hours, according to Ars Technica and The Verge. Anthropic moved to remove the material and issued takedown notices, but the material had already been widely copied and circulated, the reports said.

According to VentureBeat, by exposing the “blueprints” of Claude Code, the leak may have given “bad actors” a “road map” to bypassing security checks or tricking the tool into running hidden commands or accessing data without the user’s knowledge. A separate data leak reported in February exposed internal materials revealing details of Anthropic’s unreleased model, known as Claude Mythos, after thousands of draft documents were left accessible in a public data cache.

The model was described in the leaked material as the company’s most powerful system to date which could pose “unprecedented cybersecurity risks” if deployed widely. The company has withheld its release due to concerns over its capabilities and potential misuse, according to US business magazine Fortune.

Read more …

Just passing on. Are mini-nukes the answer?

Nano Nuclear Submits Construction Permit For Kronos Reactor In Illinois (ZH)

Nano Nuclear submitted a Construction Permit Application (CPA) to the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) for their Kronos microreactor project at the University of Illinois. The filing marks the latest step in a project we’ve tracked since site characterization began last fall. Kronos is a high-temperature gas-cooled reactor (HTGR) engineered for commercial deployment. It delivers 15 megawatts of carbon-free baseload power using meltdown-resistant TRISO fuel and helium coolant. The design emphasizes walk-away safety, autonomous operation during grid outages, and scalability through multiple units. Intended uses include powering artificial intelligence data centers, industrial electrification, military bases, and remote communities.


Nano Nuclear acquired the technology in 2024 from Ultra Safe Nuclear Corp. and positioned it as one of the first commercially ready microreactor platforms. The University of Illinois partnership targets the first full-scale Kronos research reactor deployment. We detailed the October 2025 launch of geotechnical drilling and site characterization work, followed by a ceremonial groundbreaking. Those steps built on state support from Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker and positioned the campus project as the lead effort in Nano’s broader commercialization roadmap. The company has since expanded discussions for additional deployments in Texas, South Korea, and at U.S. federal sites.

Under the NRC process, staff will first review the application package for completeness and docketing. Once accepted, the agency will conduct a formal technical and environmental evaluation. Nano estimates this formal review phase will take approximately 12 months, after which the NRC could authorize construction. The timeline aligns with recent agency efforts to streamline advanced reactor licensing while maintaining rigorous safety standards.

Company executives described the submission as validation of years of engineering and pre-application engagement. Chief Technical Officer Florent Heidet called it “a defining moment” that separates ready projects from those still in early development. The milestone keeps Nano on track for initial test operations at Illinois by the late 2020s and supports its goal of factory-built, fleet-scale microreactor production.

Read more …

What on earth happened since 1969?

We beat the Russians back then, only to be losing to China 57-odd years later?

Artemis II and the ‘Waste of Space’ (Rick Moran)

Yesterday, four human beings sat atop the most powerful machine ever built and launched themselves toward the moon. Commander Reid Wiseman, Pilot Victor Glover, Mission Specialist Christina Koch, and Mission Specialist Jeremy Hansen of the Canadian Space Agency are set to fire their engine and send their spacecraft toward the moon. They won’t land on the surface. They won’t even go into orbit. They will slingshot around the moon and return to Earth. It’s a $60 billion space stunt. That’s the total cost of the Space Launch System (SLS) program to date, and given the fact that the astronauts are doing little except proving they can go into space, travel to the moon, and come back alive, it seems an awful “waste of space.”


How do we know it’s a “stunt”? The crew consists of one white guy, one black guy (Glover), one woman, and a Canadian. Hansen will be the first non-American to visit the moon. That sounds like a “made-for-TV” extravaganza. In the 1997 film Contact, 12-year-old Ellie Arroway’s widowed father, Ted, is helping his daughter discover the wonders of the universe through a telescope. “The universe is a pretty big place,” the father tells the daughter. “It’s bigger than anything anyone has ever dreamed of before. So if it’s just us… seems like an awful waste of space.”

Ellie and Ted (the elder Ellie played by Jodie Foster alongside David Morse) were talking about the vastness of space and how it would be highly unlikely that humans were the only intelligent life. In the case of Artemis II and the SLS, the “waste of space” is the sheer, frustratingly stupid mix of politics, inefficiency, inexplicable decisions, and poor management that created a black hole for taxpayer dollars, a “forever program” that had the zombie-like ability to resist being killed, and the real possibility that the machine those four brave souls are flying in is not as safe as it should be.

NASA has inefficiency and waste built into its DNA. Because it’s government-funded, the agency needs friends in Congress to get anything done. This forces the agency to spread the pork as widely as possible. Key members of Congress who are lucky enough (or skilled enough at logrolling) to have a NASA contractor in their district make sure that programs that benefit that contractor, even if they’re wasteful and accomplish nothing, never get canceled or have their budgets cut.

Congress does not see the space program as a scientific endeavor or even as a national security necessity. To Congress, the space program is a means to gain cash for campaigns and jobs for constituents. Even when the White House tries to cancel or cut a program, Congress will inevitably restore the funding. That’s why the SLS is still going strong despite being six years late and billions of dollars over budget.

Reason.com: “As development began on the rocket, the projected budget cost through 2017 was $18 billion, a number that would soon start growing. Early in development, each launch was projected to cost $500 million, a number very optimistic in hindsight: According to the White House’s 2026 budget proposal, an SLS launch costs about $4 billion. Through last year, the total cost of the program has exceeded $60 billion.

The SLS program isn’t just way over budget. It’s way behind schedule too. Congress told it to fly by 2016, but the first launch didn’t come until 2022. The second launch will be Artemis II. When the first Trump administration started the Artemis program in 2017, the vision was to send Americans to the moon and then Mars. As the program developed, officials set a goal of having humans on the moon again by 2024. In April 2021, SpaceX won the bidding process to build the Human Landing System—the lunar lander that would deliver the astronauts to the moon’s surface. Blue Origin then sued NASA over losing out to SpaceX, and NASA had to pause work until the lawsuit ended. The suit was resolved in November, at which point SpaceX and NASA returned to work.

The oft-delayed launch of Artemis II was due to a series of hydrogen fuel leaks. The mission was pushed from its original February window to April as engineers worked to replace seals and address a subsequent issue with a clogged helium pressurization line. The rocket had to be rolled back to the Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) for these specialized repairs.It should be noted that Artemis II is a new system and will have bugs that need to be ironed out. But the same leaking hydrogen problem experienced in February also canceled the March launches. The RS-25 engine, which is being fueled by hydrogen, is considered very reliable. It’s also considered “too big to fail” because of its powerful congressional backers.

The engines are manufactured by Aerojet Rocketdyne, and the program supports thousands of jobs across multiple congressional districts. This makes a total engine redesign or a switch to a different propulsion system (like SpaceX’s Raptor or Blue Origin’s BE-4) politically difficult. Critics argue that the traditional contracting model incentivizes maintaining the current hardware rather than starting over with a cheaper, leak-resistant fuel like methane. Instead of replacing the engine, NASA and lead contractor Boeing have focused on “kindler, gentler” loading procedures and redesigned flight seals to fix the leak issues that plagued the February and March launch attempts.

NASA is shooting for a Moon landing by 2030. Given their track record, that seems more like wishful thinking. It’s more than likely that China will beat them there. It’s even possible that Elon Musk, who has abandoned his Mars dreams to go to the Moon, will reach the lunar surface before NASA. Sixty billion tax dollars for space could have been spent far more wisely. The magnificent unmanned probes we’ve sent to Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn have made spectacular discoveries that have not only expanded our knowledge of the universe but also shown us the way to a future in which humans aren’t tied to Earth or the Moon.bArtemis II is a helluva “waste of space” when you consider what that money could have been spent on.

Read more …

Good points.

The Soul-Crushing Cost of NOT Returning to the Moon for 50+ Years (Pinsker)

Question for our readers: What’s the greatest accomplishment in all of human history? Some might point to religious breakthroughs, i.e. the development of theological and/or legal doctrines. If you’re in the Ozymandias camp, you may favor big, impressive monuments — like the Great Pyramid of Giza. Or maybe you’re thinking of something more basic, like the invention of written language, which was developed independently at least four times. There are many more options, of course: The discovery of the New World. Metallurgy. Agriculture. Seafaring. The printing press. Germ theory. Unlocking the power of the atom. All the above altered the course of humanity.


But in my opinion, the single greatest accomplishment was walking on the moon. Even today, nearly 57 years after Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin left their footprints on the lunar surface, the accomplishment remains so utterly mindboggling that 10% of Americans don’t believe it happened. And, arguably, for good reason: No human has returned to the moon since 1972. If you’re under 55, the moon landing was something you read about — not something you remember watching live. For generations of Americans (including this 52-year-old scribe), there hasn’t been a day in our lives when we’ve gazed up at the sky and beamed with pride, knowing an American astronaut has “slipped the surly bonds of Earth,” soaring farther than an “eagle flew,” and “touched the face of God.”

About 25 years ago, when I worked in talk radio, I spoke to Buzz Aldrin on the phone. It was one of the few times a celebrity made me tongue-tied. I haven’t even been to Australia yet — and this guy walked on the flippin’ moon?! How can anyone compete with THAT? Imagine being at a bar, bragging about your Australian vacation, and in walks Buzz Aldrin. “Wow, you made it all the way to Australia, did you? How impressive. By the way, y’know that big white ball in the sky? It’s called the moon. That’s where I went, but please, tell me more about Australia.” Baby Boomers were shaped by the Kennedy assassination. Even today, 60+ years later, everyone still remembers where they were when they heard the fateful news.

Gen-X was shaped by the Challenger disaster. Until 9/11, it was the most jarring catastrophe of our lifetime, because it shattered America’s aura of technological invincibility. After all, we had so thoroughly conquered the cosmos, NASA actually let a schoolteacher named Christa McAuliffe hitch a ride on the shuttle as a PR stunt. Space travel was considered so mundane that none of the three major TV networks bothered to air the Challenger launch live. (CNN, still in its early years, was the exception.) How could the space shuttle blow up? We’re the nation that put a man on the moon! America doesn’t make mistakes like that!

The Challenger disaster took place on Jan. 28, 1986. That was over 40 years ago. And in the decades that followed, instead of inspiring wonder, pride, and belief in the American Dream, NASA became synonymous with budgetary bloat, technical malfunctions, and aborted missions. Uncoincidentally, as NASA’s achievements became a distant memory, each generation that followed has had less pride in America. 83% of the Silent Generation is extremely or very proud to be an American. For Boomers, it’s 75%. For Gen-X, it’s 71%. For Millennials, it’s 58%. And for Gen-Z, it’s just 41%.

There’s a crisis of patriotism among young Americans. If you want to know why so many young people are turning to socialism and communism, it’s because they lost their faith in the American Dream: Among the under-30 crowd, 34% have a favorable opinion of communism — and a whopping 62% feel favorably towards socialism. Just 50% favor capitalism.

These are damning trendlines. As the older generations die off, faith in America’s greatness is dying with them. It’s why Zoomers are now favoring socialism over capitalism by double-digits. Unless we (quickly) right the ship, we’re cheating our children and grandchildren of their American birthright. And if we’re not careful, it’ll cost us everything. It’s the responsibility of our leaders — whether they’re in government, the private sector, or in our homes — to inspire the next generation. To inscribe in their hearts and souls the belief that they can make the impossible possible — as long as they dream big, work hard, and pray with all their might. Why do you think the phrase “Make America Great Again” resonated so deeply?

Greatness is inspirational. Aspirational. Given a choice between greatness and mediocrity, greatness wins every single time. It brings out the best in us. That was the hidden cost of not returning to the moon for 50+ years: It cheated our children and grandchildren of their dreams. And sapped their pride in American greatness. But imagine a new national trajectory — where NASA, SpaceX, and American ingenuity rewrite the history books. One where Zoomers look to the sky and see a moon flooded with American astronauts and American footprints — and a permanent American moon base.Then, after reconquering the moon, we set foot on Mars. And from there, we venture even further.

Or we could do nothing. And then, when China lands a man on the moon by 2030 and builds a moon base, young Americans would gaze to the cosmos with resentment, rage, and regret: They’ve inherited a country whose best days are long gone. The Boomers got all the glory — and they got a nation in decline. And if you’re already worried about so many young Americans abandoning capitalism, what do you think will happen if America is lapped by a communist nation? More likely than not, the allure of communism and socialism will skyrocket — to the moon and beyond. Space travel isn’t cheap. Some, including my PJ Media colleague Rick Moran, argue the juice isn’t worth the squeeze. But dollars and cents aren’t the only way to measure cost: Dreams matter, too.

Dreamers are optimists; they believe our future will be greater than our past. They’re men and women of faith. The greater our dreams, the greater our country. A nation without dreams is a dying nation.As President Ronald Reagan said in his final primetime address: “We were meant to be masters of destiny, not victims of fate. Who among us would trade America’s future for that of any other country in the world? And who could possibly have so little faith in our America that they would trade our tomorrows for our yesterdays?”

After 50+ years, it’s time to give our kids a dream worth dreaming: Because they deserve nothing less.

Read more …

 

 

 

 

https://twitter.com/RealHellenist/status/2039580324997582892?s=20 https://twitter.com/DiogenisSinopis/status/2039376870970470404?s=20

 

 

 

 

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Home Forums Debt Rattle April 3 2026

Viewing 31 posts - 41 through 71 (of 71 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #237128
    those darned kids
    Participant

    schlumpconomy

    schlumpcession

    “trumpcession” is probably already used.

    yep..

    #237129
    chooch
    Participant

    What are the odds that the forces in the gulf are insufficient to bring about stated objectives?

    What are those objectives and can they be achieved with a blip in the S&P500 index?

    How do you open the straight of Hormuz?

    How do you prevent missile attacks on allied Gulf states?

    How do you prevent the IRGC, the Houthis, the militant Shias, Hezbollah and Hamas from hitting Israel with missiles day in and day out?

    How do you prevent Israel from targeting negotiators?

    Bessent claims he helped collapse the Iranian economy.

    As of March 2026, Iran is exporting approximately 1 million to 1.6 million barrels per day (bpd) of oil through the Strait of Hormuz, maintaining near-prewar levels despite broader disruptions in the region. While overall traffic in the waterway has significantly decreased, Iran has continued to load tankers, with much of the oil destined for China.

    The Torah and Quran claim that God promised them the same land.

    Both Christian Zionists and Shia clerics believe the final war over Jerusalem. It is not only inevitable but necessary.

    Trump is surrounded by Zionists.

    Gods covenant promises were fullfilled in Jesus Christ, not in a future ethnic Israeli state.

    The Kingdom of God shouldn’t be confused with the political interests of any political nation.

    #237130
    those darned kids
    Participant
    #237133
    D Benton Smith
    Participant

    Since all of the Military (and other) Intelligence Information about Iran’s capability to defend itself and punish its enemies has been proven wrong (rather dramatically, I might add) then ON WHAT BASIS is any of our latest Military Intelligence trusted to be correct in any way whatsoever?

    To state the obvious bluntly enough that any school kid could understand the fact intuitively: If Zionica was THAT wrong, going in, then they are even MORE wrong now because their so-called “Military Intelligence” services don’t know jack shit about anything, and should therefore be “trusted” about as much as a mountaineer should trust the rope that just broke and plunged him to his death.

    #237134
    Michael Reid
    Participant

    #237135
    kultsommer
    Participant

    Verified fake but funny.

    #237136
    kultsommer
    Participant

    Another one.
    One of the best “rants”..
    German speaking are denied hilarious laughter.

    #237137
    Michael Reid
    Participant

    #237138
    John Day
    Participant

    The Actual Military Objectives https://drjohnsblog.substack.com/p/the-actual-military-objectives

    Peak “conventional oil” happened around 2005 on planet Earth, followed by the 2008 Global Financial Crisis. The real-economy was pulled from the swirling drain by fracking of shale oil and promised future financial profits to keep global finance operational for one last gasp with the newly redefined “Oil” being “crude + condensates”,which peaked in November 2018, followed by the “repo-crisis”in August-September 2019, and the “going direct bailout” during COVID lockdowns in March-April 2020, which delayed the inflation until 2021 when lockdowns ended and people bought what they could find at twice the price. There was a semblance of return to a ghost of normalcy, with restaurants and small businesses badly attrited, and the knowledge that we had been lied to and poisoned, but we did have bills to pay…
    “Crude + Condensates” production rose again, but peaked again in October 2025, and we now suddenly have the most important oil and natural gas conduit in the world, 20% of shipped production, mostly locked down,and demanding a change in the (“petrobuck”) $US global financial system to open up for each ship bearing cargo, a non-$US tollbooth.
    Emperor Trump has said he doesn’t care and the US doesn’t need it, so the US will bomb Iran heavily for 2 weeks and leave, because the US has important things to do onabusy schedule, maybe invading Cuba, because they are supporting terrorists, too.
    Something that is easy to miss is that Israel intends to become the trade control-point between India & the Mideast, and Europe, which requires destroying the alternative routes through Iran and Turkey, as explained by Escape Key, Iran is being destroyed. Iran’s Chabahar port might be invaded by US & “coalition” forces soon. This somewhat clarifies vague USraeli “military objectives” which appear to be massive-destruction of Iran.
    The important point is that global financial elites, our “owners” and the politicians they pay and advise privately, need to front-run the coming collapse with a big enough war to kill enough people, and scare the remaining people into meek obedience, while they do the messy work of maintaining their own power, culling the human herds (us) and reforming the global economy to profit them, through owning trade and financial choke-points such as the strait of Hormuz, where they can collect tolls.
    This may take awhile. Be out of debt and secure your ongoing basic survival needs to the best of your ability. The crop failures from fertilizer shortage will hit hard, but probably won’t kill most people reading these words. This famine may kill some sizeable fraction of us this year and next, though…

    The Honest Sorcerer on this particular route to our inevitable destination: Iran War: The Road To Ruin​ …​ or how a holiday from reality comes to an end
    Businesses don’t burn crude oil in tractors, trucks, construction and digging equipment—feeding, moving, mining and building the world—but diesel fuel made by refineries. Thus, when the biggest source of diesel (the Middle East) is taken out of the picture, a global shortage of heavy transportation fuels arises almost instantly. And this is the real issue here: the actual lack of fuel…
    ..Even as some nations managed to buy or negotiate their way through the strait, we are talking about a handful of ships, not the 20-30 vessels transiting every single day before the war…
    ..Even in the most benign scenario—the continuation of missile exchanges without breaking anything critical—the real economic trouble is just about to begin. You see, there is a massive time lag between the start of a maritime blockade and the time when the shortage actually begins. Ships unloading crude this week in various Asian and European ports started their journey just before Israel and US attacked Iran. The past few weeks were a holiday from reality, with ships arriving according to schedule and oil being unloaded as usual. That period, however, has ended…
    ..Oil in storage (used strictly to replace lost imports) could last for 10 months in China, 5 months in Japan, and 4 months in India… But only 2 months in South Korea, and even less than that in Australia. Even if the crisis were to end tomorrow, which it won’t, many Asia-Pacific countries would still have to face actual physical shortages…
    ..In highly import dependent nations, stress signals have already started to show up. Authorities have ordered employees to work from home across Asia, cut the working week, declared national holidays and closed universities early in order to conserve their supplies. Even China is making adjustments, trying to limit a fuel price hike there. At gas stations across Hanoi, Vietnam, “sold out” signs have started to appear, with around 15 to 20 stations shutting their pumps in recent days. In South Africa 75% of farmers indicated that they do not have access to fuel, and in some cases, receive as little as 20% of their usual monthly diesel allocations.​ The Philippine president declared a national energy emergency as fuel prices doubled and as vegetable farmers have been forced to stop planting.​.. Cooking gas shortages have prompted an exodus of migrant workers leaving cities for their home states, where biomass cooking remains accessible​… Combined with fertilizer shortages, delayed planting due to a lack of diesel fuel and the resulting slump in crop yields, however, the situation could easily become explosive—no matter what authorities decide to do.​..
    ..Although LNG is widely used in the region, most industries do not have the capacity to store much of it, even if it is subsidized. Some, especially small businesses and agricultural companies, will be forced to close soon…​ This is the brutal reality of demand destruction: someone will eventually have to go without—and its usually not the wealthy… And if South Asian buyers—already priced out of spot LNG markets—are the canary in the coal mine, then we know who’s next: Europe.​..
    ..And since plastic is so ubiquitous, a massive number of companies are going to be affected downstream… Just like with COVID: if a special part becomes unavailable, it could make massive disruption in production on the other side of the planet.​..
    ..Whenever there is an energy shock, batteries, solar panels and wind turbines are being touted as the “solution”—completely disregarding the fact that all of these technologies owe their existence to the very fuels they aim to replace. Coal. Oil. Natural gas…​
    ..For a case study on how a scarcity of diesel fuel and a lack of sulfur (a byproduct of oil refineries) could wreak havoc on the electrification business look no further than Australia. In 2024 the continent sized country produced 26% of all bauxite, 38% of all iron ore, and 49% of all lithium mined on the entire planet. And they did so by burning thousands of gallons of diesel fuel per hour in giant excavators and dumpers, and leeching ores with sulfuric acid—particularly copper, uranium, and nickel. Commodity and stock markets, again, remain blissfully unaware what’s coming their way.
    ​ Now, as I mentioned earlier, Australia gets more than two thirds of its fuel imports from four countries: Korea, Singapore, Taiwan and India, who themselves are at a dire situation already​… We are talking about a crisis potentially affecting 49% of all Lithium mined on planet Earth… Well, so much for cheap Chinese electric vehicles “killing demand for oil.”​…
    ..The Hormuz crisis has every potential to kill the AI boom—or at least to put an abrupt end to the growth of ‘hyperscalers’. As things stand today, a whopping $1.5 trillion in planned AI infrastructure might prove to be impossible to manufacture, due to a lack of Helium (a byproduct of LNG production and an essential material in chip fabrication)…​As Richard Heinberg pointed out recently, that “today’s AI financial bubble is four times bigger than the subprime mortgage bubble of 2008 and 17 times bigger than the dot-com bubble of 2000.”.​..
    ..Iran managed to deliver a serious blow to the petrodollar system, too. In a nutshell: Gulf monarchies agreed to sell their oil in dollars, in exchange for military “protection” (as in painting a target on their backs). Up until recently the system worked brilliantly: countries buying oil were forced to use the dollar in their dealings, and the massive profits generated by that trade have been re-injected into the US economy in the form of investments and US Treasury Bonds. You see the world saves in dollars largely because it pays for its energy in dollars…
    ​..That system is now experiencing a heart attack, as much of Gulf oil is no longer allowed to leave, and as revenues no longer flow into Gulf monarchies.
    Due to the dearth of surplus dollars reinvested into the financial economy, the risk of a global credit crunch has ​gone up considerably. Private credit, a $2 trillion industry that lends funds directly to companies that can’t easily tap public markets, is already showing major cracks​…
    ..Finally, as an added bonus, Iran is already offering an alternative system: demanding payments for passage for ships in Chinese Yuan. Money, which they can not only use to buy just about anything (from plastic bags to $100,000 hypersonic missiles), but also to completely avoid sanctions, as transactions in Yuan can be handled outside the SWIFT system…
    ..Meanwhile US peak oil is back on the map again—this time, however, without any miracles waiting to happen. According to EIA data (originating from before the war) peak US oil production occurred in October 2025 at 13.86 million barrels a day, and is unlikely to return to that level in the foreseeable future. The shale ‘revolution’ has run its course. It’s not hard to see how this information might also have played a role in the US decision to start the war on Iran. Despite all the rhetoric, the US has become a net exporter in late 2019 only. With production figures expected to return to (then fall below) those levels in 2028,7 there is really not much time left to take over the entire world. Attacking Iran thus was a “now, or never” decision—especially when you consider that the ultimate goal was to gain leverage over China, which could only be achieved by going after its sources of oil…
    ..We are living through a turning point in history… While losing 20% of world oil supply is a mighty big thing—especially if oil infrastructure gets damaged—it will not take us back to the stone age instantly.
    ​ As things stand today, we are headed towards an economic depression comparable in scale and longevity to that of the 1930’s. Raw material, fuel, parts and other shortages stemming from supply chain disruptions will have their economic ripple effects all around the globe, forcing many companies to stop their production lines and to send their workers home. Business failures, foreclosures and unemployment is almost guaranteed to rise at this point, and GDP will fall far steeper than what present (subdued, manipulated) oil prices and forecasts might suggest. A major financial reset, too, seems to be unavoidable. Living standards across the globe will (continue to) fall… Economies will have to re-localize and simplify—by a lot. International trade will decline.​..
    ..Earth’s carrying capacity of humans will be greatly reduced, as a chronic lack of fertilizer and diesel fuel will prevent us from planting and harvesting as much food as we used to do before the war. That, however, doesn’t mean that we will lose everything all at once, or that everyone will go hungry. At the moment it is very hard to tell how deep this major round of simplification—initiated by a foolhardy attack on Iran—will go, or how high the world economy will be able to rebound after hostilities end. Should the fuel crisis persist for years to come, as many suspect it will, or should world oil production never return to January 2026 levels (which is highly likely), many countries will be forced to sell much of their livestock to save food for people, as well as to give up on industry and mining altogether to save on fuel for agriculture and transportation.​ https://thehonestsorcerer.substack.com/p/iran-war-the-road-to-ruin

    Gulf Energy Shock Spreads To Global Plastics As War Sparks Force Majeure Wave​ https://www.zerohedge.com/commodities/gulf-energy-shock-spreads-global-plastics-war-spark-force-majeure-wave

    ​ World Affairs in Context Podcast​, MICHAEL HUDSON:
    Well, closing the Strait of Hormuz always has been recognized as Iran’s first and most obvious response way back in the 1970s. We were talking about that. First of all, the Strait of Hormuz has remained open all of this time. All of Trump’s threats that were going to need an army to reopen it are irrelevant because Iran is, as you just pointed out, letting ships from India, Japan, and other countries use it, so there’s been no need to liberate it. That’s not what the imminent attack on Iran is all about. It’s not about opening the Strait of Hormuz. It’s not about stopping Iran from having an atom bomb, which it wasn’t aiming for in all these past decades. And it’s not even about stopping Iran from having missiles and dismantling them. It’s always about a strategy that the United States has been planning and announced formally in 2003 when Wesley Clark, the general, said that America was going to occupy five countries in seven years, ending with Iran. The whole aim of America’s using the Middle East to control the major source of oil exports is centered upon removing oil, Iran, from the picture, at least removing Iran’s nationalistic leadership that overthrew the Shah from the picture. With Iran out of the picture, the United States can easily control the Arab OPEC countries as it’s done now. So this whole pretense that the fight that’s going to occur this weekend, Friday evening near Eastern time and Saturday morning U.S. time, is about sending troops to occupy an island in the strait or to force open the strait. That’s all a diversionary effect.
    ​ But what Iran has done so far, since you mentioned it, is put in place a very simple strategy. First of all, by charging $2 million for OPEC Arab ships going through, it’s made an advance payment on what it’s going to be charging for reparations, for the damage that’s already been done by the United States and Israel against itself. And it will simply use these charges to rebuild Iran. So, first of all, this has laid the groundwork for how Iran is going to impose reparations. Secondly, this prevents Trump from threatening the use of force because if ships are going in and out through the strait, it isn’t closed; it’s only closed to Iran’s enemies. So Trump is really trying to say, let our OPEC companies export without having to pay you any money at all. We want OPEC countries to have all the money so that they can do what they want as part of the American dollarized economic system. Third, pricing the oils in RMB has turned the tables on the United States by using its control of the world oil trade as a means of supporting the dollar. In this case, henceforth, the oil trade is going to be spent on non-dollar currencies, the nightmare of America’s dollarization. And fourth, just turns the tables also on U.S. government policy by using the threat of closing off oil as a means of imposing sanctions on other countries. The United States has been able to use the threat of closing OPEC oil to say that it can turn off the energy flow to countries that do not agree to follow policies that follow the United States leadership. Well, here it’s Iran that’s imposing sanctions on these countries, saying that America’s allies are saying, well, if you’re going to ally yourself with the United States and don’t meet the terms for us breaking the U.S. control over the entire Middle East and its oil exports, then we’re not going to let you conduct this trade. So this is the big issue. Iranian strategy that has led the United States to make all the threats that it’s been making.​ https://michael-hudson.com/2026/03/irans-economic-counterattack-explained/

    ​ The Oil Shock That Could Break the Global Financial System​, MICHAEL HUDSON:
    Well, you mentioned that it’s for the last few years or decades; it has actually gone back half a century.
    ​ Already in the mid-1970s, when I was working for the Hudson Institute, on contracts with the Treasury, and the White House, and the Defense Department, I sat in on meetings, and they were discussing all along how ultimately the United States was going to have to take control of all of the Middle Eastern oil, and that entailed conquering Iran.
    ​ And in the mid-1970s, at one military meeting, for instance, Herman Kahn was explaining how probably Baluchistan was the main opportunity to begin carving up Iran into subject ethnic constituencies. And Baluchistan, in between Pakistan and Iran, was probably the best place to start a separatist movement. There were military plans.
    ​ My field in the mid-1970s was oil and the balance of payments. I had that position at Chase Manhattan Bank for many years. I actually was the only — I was so low on the totem pole, being a technician and in my mid-20s, that I was the only person who was allowed to see all of the operating details and statistics of the US oil companies, the major companies, so that I could make a calculation as to the role that oil played in the balance of payments, supporting the dollar.
    ​ This was right after the United States was forced off gold, in 1971, because of the Vietnam War.
    ​ So, the United States all along has realized that what you’re seeing today was going to be the endgame of consolidating, they hoped, American control over the Middle Eastern oil; and they wanted their because the central point, the strongest lever that American foreign policy has had for the last century, is control of the world’s oil trade.
    ​ Because it’s so immensely profitable for the American oil companies themselves — it has given the oil companies major control over US policy — and also the US economy’s potential control over other countries, by the ability to turn off the supply of oil to other countries, thereby stopping their electricity production, stopping their chemical production, their fertilizer production with natural gas.
    ​ The oil industry includes the gas industry, because they’re so closely interconnected. All of this has been thought out. And every year, the military has been upgrading the long-term plans for — well, if we really, have to use force to entail our control over the Near East, the Middle East; if, for any reason, the OPEC oil countries want to become independent of the United States, and begin investing their oil profits outside of the United States, instead of sending all of their oil earnings to the United States, to invest in Treasury bonds, corporate bonds, US bank deposits, and stock holdings; well, if any of them should want to exert their own sovereignty and go their own way, we’re going to have to take over; and no matter what, we’re going to have to take over Iran, because that is the most powerful, final locking point of US control.
    ​ And, as we have discussed before, in 2003, General Wesley Clark came right out and said, well, we’re going to conquer seven countries in five years, culminating with Iran.
    ​ So all of this has been completely open. This is not simply Donald Trump’s war. It’s a war which he decided at this time, because America has steadily been losing its position of economic strength, military strength, and arms supply, and missiles, and aircraft, and bombs, as a result of the war, first in Ukraine, and then supplying Israel.
    ​ So there will never be a less bad time to go to war than at the present. And of course, it is a bad time, but it’s not as bad as it’s going to be. And the military, the neocons behind the military and behind the Central Intelligence Agency, are not going to give up.
    ​ They say, “Well, what do we have to lose? If we don’t conquer the Middle Eastern oil now, then we’re going to be losing what has become the major lever of American foreign policy”.
    ​ Donald Trump believed that he could conquer Iran, within two to four weeks. He actually believe​d that.
    ​ And his hope was that, by that time he went on his scheduled trip to China, he could confront China, saying, “Well, we’ve just caused a regime change in Iran. We’ve appointed an Iranian client oligarch, client dictator to take over and become sort of Iran’s version of Boris Yeltsin, administering Iranian oil in the interests of the United States”.
    ​ “So, we now have the power to impose sanctions on you, China. We can cut off your oil. But, you know, we don’t want to do that. If you begin to export the raw materials, the gallium, the tungsten, and all the other things that we need for our military that you’ve put an export control on, then we will give you the oil”.
    ​ Trump had hoped to be able to present China with that victory. Well, obviously that’s gone. The military miscalculated, because they could not think of an alternative that would threaten this grand plan.
    ​ Remember all of the American military attacks, for the last 50 years, ever since Vietnam — all of the wars that the US had, from Vietnam to Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Venezuela.
    ​ It has always been the United States and its allies, the coalition of the willing, against single countries. This is the first war that America has fought since World War Two where other countries that it’s fighting against are allied with each other.
    ​ It’s not just fighting against Iran now. It’s fighting against Iran, supported by Russia and China, because they all realize that this is a fight to the end, to decide: Is the United States going to be able to reassert its control over the world economy using monopolies? The oil monopoly, the information technology monopoly that it’s trying to do, the computer chip monopoly, the technology monopoly, also its ability to supply food to other countries, its exports and control of grain.
    ​ This is the last chance that it has. And there’s a feeling of desperation that has led the US planners to bet at all.
    ​ And that I think that it’s not going to work. All of the generals have told them that it’s not going to work. The generals who have been pessimistic have pretty much been forced out of the military, and the State Department, because, “If you’re pessimistic, well, why aren’t you on board? You know, why aren’t you on the team? Or are you Putin’s puppet? You know, you’ve just gotta have faith”.
    ​ America believed that it could not lose any war because its policy of bombing other countries was always going to work.
    ​ The American philosophy is, number one, you bomb civilians; you break all the rules of international law which are against that. You bomb civilians to demoralize them.
    ​ And if you concentrate, as Trump did along with Israel, a few weeks ago, you bomb the schools; you bomb the hospitals. That’s American policy in foreign countries.
    ​ It’s most visible in the case of Israeli policy, in Gaza, and now the West Bank as well. And it is the same policy that the United States has followed in Iran.
    ​ Well, the idea was that this would demoralize the population, and the Iranian population would want to get rid of the ayatollahs and say, “We don’t want to be bombed anymore; we want to save the children; let’s make a deal and appoint a leader favorable to the United States so that it will stop bombing us”.
    ​ Well, this was nonsense from the beginning, but it was the guiding spirit of American foreign policy: bomb a country, and that will lead to a regime change, and a collapse.
    ​ That was what America expected in Russia.
    ​ But Iran essentially has the same spirit that Patrick Henry had in America’s revolution against Britain in 1776. He said, “Give me liberty or give me death!”. And that’s exactly what Iran is saying.
    ​ For them, this is existential, because they know what the US plans are, since the United States has been so open about what its plans are.
    ​ Yes, they want a regime change; they want to break up Iran into parts; they want to take control of Iranian oil and use the oil export revenues to support the US dollar, and to support basically the US economy, and to give American foreign policy the option of turning off the oil to other countries, to say, “We can close down your industry, your chemical industry, all your industries that need electric power, oil, gas; we can do all that, if you take an independent policy, following your own sovereignty. And we in the United States reject the United Nations principle that every nation has its own sovereignty”.
    ​ This is the basic principle of Western civilization for the last half century, the basic principle of the United Nations Charter. All of that is being rejected by the United States.
    ​ And what it has done is galvanize other countries to recognize that, well, yes, this really is the final conflict.
    ​ This is a conflict, in Iran, to determine what will the shape of the international economy be? Is it going to restore American control of the oil trade, and give it the chokepoint over the international economy that it’s looking for? Or are we going to be independent of the United States?
    ​ That’s what this this war is all about.​ https://michael-hudson.com/2026/03/the-oil-shock-that-could-break-the-global-financial-system/

    #237139
    John Day
    Participant

    “Peace” is what Gaza has, as you’ll recall: Railway for Regional Peace, Escape Key
    In 2018, Israel proposed a high-speed rail network called ‘Railways for Regional Peace’, connecting the Gulf states through Jordan to Israel’s Mediterranean ports1.
    ​ A May 2025 paper from the Begin-Sadat Centre for Strategic Studies at Bar-Ilan University confirms that this Israeli rail project became the template for a much larger initiative: the India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor, or IMEC.
    ​ IMEC runs by sea from Indian ports to the Gulf, then by rail across Saudi Arabia, through Jordan, and into the Israeli port of Haifa. From Haifa, cargo crosses the Mediterranean to Greece or Italy and onward into Europe. Alongside the rail lines run electricity cables, hydrogen pipelines, and high-speed fibre optic cables.
    ​ Every flow passes through Israel. There is no bypass in the corridor’s design.
    In September 2024, Prime Minister Netanyahu stood at the UN General Assembly podium holding two maps.
    ​ The first he called ‘a blessing’: Israel and its Arab partners forming a land bridge connecting Asia and Europe, with rail lines, energy pipelines, and fibre optic cables. The second he called ‘a curse’: an arc of Iranian-backed resistance stretching from the Indian Ocean to the Mediterranean, shutting down international waterways and cutting off trade…
    ​..For the territories along the corridor, he specified the template. Gaza would be ‘demilitarised and deradicalised’, governed by a local civilian administration committed to peaceful coexistence. Iran would face pre-emptive force. Lebanon would comply with existing UN resolutions.
    ​ The corridor, the war, the governance of destroyed territories, and the compliance framework — all stated in a single speech, five months before the strikes on Iran began.​..
    ​..What IMEC actually is
    Most trade corridors are shipping routes. IMEC’s own design documents, presented by India’s Directorate General of Shipping at India Maritime Week in October 2025, describe three pillars: transportation, energy, and digital.
    ​ The first two are straightforward — stuff that physically moves, and stuff that makes things move. The third is different. The fibre optic cables and cross-border digital infrastructure carry identity verification, transaction monitoring, and programmable conditions.
    ​ The first two pillars are the system. The third is the feedback loop that governs it.
    The same presentation names the geopolitical disruptions that make IMEC necessary: the Suez Canal blockage, the Russia-Ukraine war, and US tariff wars. The officials promoting the corridor are presenting the conflicts as its commercial justification…
    ​..The corridors Israel bypasses
    Iraq’s Development Road — the $17 billion project connecting Basra to Turkey, with Chinese engineering involvement — would have given the Eastern clearing system a land route bypassing both Hormuz and Israel. The International North-South Transport Corridor, running from Mumbai to Moscow via Iran and Azerbaijan, is a second competing route — one that India’s own Director General of Maritime Administration describes as offering 30 per cent cost savings and 40 per cent faster transit.
    ​ Both corridors bypass Israel. Both depend on Iranian territory or Iranian stability.​ The war degrades both simultaneously. It sets the Development Road back by years and renders the INSTC unviable for as long as Iran’s infrastructure is under attack. Iran is the most important BRICS+ member in the Gulf region, and its military capacity was the one thing that made IMEC’s eastern sea lane unviable. Destroying that capacity clears the physical path, weakens both competing corridors, and forces the Gulf states to commit to the Western-backed system rather than continuing to hedge.
    ​ One military operation produces three strategic outcomes: IMEC’s eastern sea lane is secured, the Development Road is set back, and the INSTC is rendered unviable. In March 2026, a RAND economist told CNBC that ‘if Israel and the US win, IMEC will likely be Israel’s preference over the revival of Chabahar’. Chatham House confirmed the Chabahar-Zahedan railway — a key INSTC component — faces ‘indefinite delays’.
    ​ India’s $120 million Chabahar investment is at risk because its US sanctions waiver expires in April 2026. The war is resolving India’s hedge.​ https://escapekey.substack.com/p/railways-for-regional-peace

    ​Chabahar, Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chabahar

    Balochistan, Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balochistan

    Russia Sends Six Submarines to Strait of Hormuz​ – Chechen Troops Assembled to Aid Iran if Invaded, as China Reportedly Preps 100,000 Troops​ https://www.globalresearch.ca/russia-sends-six-submarines-strait-hormuz/5920983

    Iran To Attack Logistical Hubs In Israel, Gulf After Its Tallest Bridge Destroyed​ https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/iran-plans-attack-logistical-hubs-israel-gulf-after-its-tallest-bridge-destroyed

    #237140
    John Day
    Participant

    Trump Says ‘A Little More Time’ Needed To Open Hormuz, ‘Take The Oil & Make A Fortune’ – As Israel Hit Hard During Passover
    Trump: US needs “a little more time” to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, while floating the prospect of seizing oil amid potential island or ground campaign
    ​ Iran and Hezbollah fire 140+ rockets during Jewish Passover, with sustained barrages hitting Israel
    French-owned vessel becomes first Western-linked/European ship to transit Hormuz since war began, signaling a tentative thaw after weeks of near-total shipping freeze​ https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/trump-says-little-more-time-needed-open-hormuz-take-oil-make-fortune-israel-hit-hard

    Houthis Confirm Coordination With Iran, Hezbollah In Several Attack Waves On Israel​ https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/houthis-confirm-coordination-iran-hezbollah-several-attack-waves-israel

    Hezbollah Launches First Ever Scud Ballistic Missile Strike to Target Key Israeli Missile and Space Base​ https://militarywatchmagazine.com/article/hezbollah-first-ballistic-israeli-missile-base

    Oil Drops As Iran/Oman Draft Protocol To Re-Open Hormuz After Trump’s Overnight Threats​ https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/irans-highest-bridge-middle-east-destroyed-after-trumps-back-stone-age-threat

    Private Credit Bank Run Begins: Blue Owl Gates After Shocking 41% Of OTIC Investors Ask For Their Money​ https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/private-credit-bank-run-begins-blue-owl-gates-after-shocking-41-tech-fund-investors-ask

    #237141
    John Day
    Participant

    Cash Is King, Dowd Sees $10,000 Gold As The Credit Market “Is Starting To End The Party”​ https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/cash-king-dowd-sees-10000-gold-credit-market-starting-end-party

    Iranian President Issues Open Letter To Americans, Questions If Washington Putting “America First” Or Acting As “Proxy For Israel”​ https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/uae-poised-join-anti-iran-operations-trump-rips-nato-paper-tiger-says-exit-beyond

    Kremlin Asks US For Ceasefire At Bushehr Nuclear Plant To Get Remaining Russian Staff Out​ https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/moscow-asks-us-ceasefire-bushehr-nuclear-plant-get-remaining-russian-staff-out

    ​ Kuwait desalination plant, oil refinery hit by missile and drone strikes
    Meanwhile in UAE, 12 people were injured by debris fall and Oracle and Amazon Web Services data centres were hit.
    ​ Kuwaiti authorities blamed Iran for the strike before midday on Friday. The plant was not identified and the extent of the damage isn’t known.
    Following the attack, Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) denied responsibility and shifted blame to Israel.
    ​ Israel’s “unconventional and illegitimate attack on Kuwait’s water desalination centres is a sign of the vileness and baseness of the Zionist occupiers,” the IRGC said in a statement posted on Telegram.​ https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/4/3/kuwait-desalination-plant-oil-refinery-hit-by-missile-and-drone-strikes

    ​ What, doesn’t he want to invade Iran? Hegseth Ousts Chief Of The Army As Iran War Persists
    The Pentagon shake-up under Trump has not ended, as on Thursday Pete Hegseth has dismissed Army Chief of Staff Gen. Randy George, asking him to step down into early retirement. The move is unusual, given this is the head of the Army and the United States is past the one-moth mark in Trump’s Operation Epic Fury. A reason hasn’t been given as to what amounts to Gen. George being effectively fired. https://www.zerohedge.com/military/hegseth-ousts-chief-army-iran-war-persists

    #237142
    John Day
    Participant

    ​ Allegations Of Pentagon “Casualty Cover-Up”: The Intercept
    Two officials confirmed that at least 15 soldiers were injured last week in an Iranian strike on a Saudi air base, adding that “Hundreds of US personnel have been killed or injured in the region since the US launched a war on Iran just over a month ago.”
    ​ The Intercept found that CENTCOM’s latest April 2nd casualty count and ‘update’ to be “three days old and excluded at least 15 wounded in the Friday attack on Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia,” noting that “The command did not reply to repeated requests for updated figures.” This has raised suspicions that other incidents are being omitted too.​ https://www.zerohedge.com/military/allegations-pentagon-casualty-cover-intercept

    ​ Gold & Geopolitics, Daily digest: 2026-04-03
    Iran war escalation into infrastructure warfare: Trump’s primetime speech offered no de-escalation, threatening to bomb Iran “back to the stone ages” with 2-3 more weeks of strikes targeting power plants, bridges, and desalination. The B1 Bridge connecting Tehran to Karaj was destroyed in a double-tap strike that hit rescue workers. Oil surged past $112/barrel WTI intraday…
    ..Pentagon purge during active war: Hegseth fired Army Chief of Staff Gen. Randy George, reportedly opposed to a ground invasion of Iran. Two more generals — Hodne (Training Command) and Green (Chaplain Corps) — removed the same day. George replaced by Hegseth’s former personal aide. 26 generals/admirals removed since Hegseth took office. Multiple sources say George was categorically opposed to ground operations.​..
    ..Iran shoots down US fighter jet: Iran claims to have downed a US aircraft over its territory. Debris analysis by multiple OSINT accounts confirms wreckage consistent with an F-15E Strike Eagle, not the initially claimed F-35. CENTCOM denies any aircraft lost. Two crew ejecting visible in footage…​ ..Russia, China, France block UN Hormuz resolution: Bahrain’s draft resolution authorising force to reopen the Strait of Hormuz was killed by triple veto. France, a NATO ally with 14 CMA CGM vessels trapped in the Gulf, sided with Beijing and Moscow…
    ​..IRGC published eight-bridge retaliation list across Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, UAE, and Jordan — including all three bridges connecting Abu Dhabi to the mainland​…
    ​..Pam Bondi fired as Attorney General, replaced by Deputy AG Todd Blanche. Reportedly begged Trump not to fire her. Firing linked to dissatisfaction over Epstein case handling
    ​ Tulsi Gabbard reportedly on chopping block. Trump shot down the idea of moving Bondi to replace her
    FBI Director Patel, Army Secretary Driscoll, and Labor Secretary Chavez-DeRemer could be next​…
    ​..Hormuz toll regime taking shape
    Iran and Oman drafting protocol for “supervised and coordinated” transit — positioning for long-term control
    ​ Ships paying fees in yuan for passage. Clear pattern: only Global South countries granted passage
    Three supertankers slipped through Omani waters bypassing Iran’s checkpoint — proof of concept for a workaround, but only 3 ships vs. the 75-85/day pr​e-war baseline​…
    ​..First French-owned vessel (CMA CGM) passed through Hormuz since the war began. Did they pay in yuan?​ https://no1sdailydigest.substack.com/p/daily-digest-2026-04-03

    Israel Halts Arms Purchases From France In Rebuke For Iran War Stance​ https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/israel-halts-arms-purchases-france-rebuke-iran-war-stance

    ​ Gold & Geopolitics, Daily digest: 2026-04-02
    Iran struck digital infrastructure before its own deadline — Iranian missiles hit Batelco HQ in Hamala, Bahrain (country’s largest telecom, hosting Amazon Web Services infrastructure) — before the April 6 IRGC deadline for 18 US companies expired. Also struck: Kuwait Airport fuel tanks, and US Fifth Fleet HQ in Bahrain…
    ..Axis of Resistance operating as single military body — For the first time, Yemen announced a missile attack on Israel in explicit coordination with Iran AND Hezbollah simultaneously. Iran launched its “largest continuous attack in 3 weeks” on April 1: 312 simultaneous rocket alerts covering 5.6M+ Israelis, cluster-warhead ballistic missiles impacting Tel Aviv and Bnei Brak…
    ..470,000 containers and 20,000 seafarers trapped inside Persian Gulf — 65 vessels of the top 5 container lines stranded…
    ..NATO fracture: US considering exit, European intelligence relationship broken — Trump called NATO a “paper tiger” in Telegraph interview; Rubio questioned whether it’s “a one-way street.” UK officials confirm they “can no longer trust US counterparts with sensitive material.” France, Spain, Italy blocked airspace and bases — first collective European refusal of American military requests…
    ​..50,000+ US troops in region; 1,000 82nd Airborne; 5,000 Marines on amphibious ready groups; 12 A-10 Warthogs deployed to RAF Lakenheath (ex-CIA Larry Johnson: “only one reason for A-10s — close air support for ground troops”)​…
    ..Iran FM Araghchi: “No negotiation has taken place. Trust level is at zero. We are waiting for them.” …
    ​..IRGC seized direct control of Iranian governance — rejected ALL intelligence minister candidates proposed by President Pezeshkian​…
    ​..April 6 deadline (Easter April 5). Pakistan-China brokering 5-point framework — war being negotiated in a Chinese conference room​…
    ​..Hormuz Toll System as de-dollarization engine
    IRGC collecting yuan/stablecoins via CIPS network; $2M/vessel for Larak corridor; $1/barrel oil fee projected at $100B/year revenue
    ​ India importing first Iranian oil in 7 years at ~$100/bbl — “quite the achievement in Washington for the long-term strength of the sanctions regime” Javier Blas
    ​ Turkey (NATO member) sold more repo-able Treasuries than non-repo-able gold ​…
    ..Netanyahu proposing Saudi-Mediterranean pipeline bypassing Hormuz — would give Tel Aviv leverage over entire GCC​…
    ​..Global food crisis in slow motion
    85-95% of Hormuz fertilizer traffic stopped; urea up 25-50% to $420-720/tonne
    ​ India losing 800,000 tonnes/month domestic urea (natural gas feedstock itself blocked at Hormuz)
    South/Southeast Asia: 8-15% rice/wheat yield reductions projected if disruptions persist through May. No ceasefire reverses a missed planting season
    ​ Pakistan redirected 78M cubic feet/day gas from fertilizer plants to residential heating — government chose warmth over food
    US corn: urea-to-corn ratio at 126 bushels/tonne vs. historical 75; 93M acres projected vs. 99M baseline; cascades to meat/dairy +10-25% by early 2027​..“The rice plant does not negotiate. It has a biological clock. And the clock is running.”​…
    ​..WH senior staff discussing $150-200/bbl oil scenarios; Treasury sees $100+ as “baseline”​… “Oil shocks often arrive as inflation and leave as recession.”​ https://no1sdailydigest.substack.com/p/daily-digest-2026-04-02

    ​Thou shalt not negotiate against Israeli wishes: Senior Iranian Official Involved In Reaching Out To Vance Severely Wounded In Airstrike https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/senior-iranian-official-involved-reaching-out-vance-severely-wounded-airstrike

    #237143
    John Day
    Participant

    This could do the “stone age” thing Trump boasted of. UN representative resigns over claims of planned nuclear strike on Iran
    Mohamad Safa, a UN representative for the Patriotic Vision Association NGO, also claimed that senior figures at the UN were ‘serving a powerful lobby’​ https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/un-representative-resigns-over-claims-planned-nuclear-strike-iran

    ​Nobody injured, or we’d be told, right?… IRGC targets hideout of US Fifth Fleet commanders in Bahrain https://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2026/03/30/766093/IRGC-targets-hideout-of-US-Fifth-Fleet-commanders-in-Bahrain

    US Fighter Jet Shot Down In Iran, One Crew Member Reported Rescued​ https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/us-fighter-jet-downed-iran-large-aerial-search-underway-crew

    ​ Most Americans want Iran war ended quickly, oppose ground troops: Polls​ – Preventing gas price hikes rated twice as important as regime change, surveys show​ https://www.aa.com.tr/en/americas/most-americans-want-iran-war-ended-quickly-oppose-ground-troops-polls/3888611

    ​South Korean air-defense system gets A+ against Iranian attacks: Cheongung-II Air Defense System Intercepts 29 of 30 Targets in UAE Combat Debut
    “The Cheongung-II system deployed in the UAE demonstrated a 96% hit rate in real combat operations while countering a large-scale Iranian air attack,” said Yoo Yong-won.
    ​ The Korean outlet Korea JoongAng Daily reported that the UAE used 60 interceptor missiles to engage 30 targets, successfully neutralizing 29 of them. It noted that multiple interceptors, usually two, are launched per target to ensure a successful kill.
    ​ Following the system’s successful use, the UAE government has asked South Korea to accelerate deliveries of additional Cheongung-II batteries and interceptors. Abu Dhabi aims to receive the ordered equipment ahead of the deadlines set in the main contract to strengthen its defense against Iranian strikes.
    ​ As previously reported, in early March the Cheongung-II system deployed in the UAE intercepted an Iranian ballistic missile for the first time. At the onset of the Iranian attacks, two batteries of the system were deployed in the country.
    ​ In 2022, the UAE signed a contract with South Korea worth approximately $3.5 billion for the purchase of 10 Cheongung-II batteries. At the time, it was the largest arms export deal in South Korea’s history.​ https://militarnyi.com/en/news/cheongung-ii-air-defense-system-intercepts/

    #237144
    John Day
    Participant

    If intentional, what might this mean? Russian Embassy Outraged After US-Israeli Strikes Damage Orthodox Church In Tehran https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/russian-embassy-outraged-after-us-israeli-strikes-damage-orthodox-church-tehran

    Extremist settlers assault Palestinian shepherds in Masafer Yatta​ https://english.palinfo.com/news/2026/04/01/360512/

    Israel Continues Raids in Occupied West Bank, Detains Palestinians​ https://www.telesurenglish.net/israel-raids-west-bank-detains-palestine/

    ​ With the Death Penalty for Palestinians, Israel Signals: Long Live the Jewish Terrorists
    Legal viability aside, the new law reveals a deeper question, reflecting a perverse dissonance in Israeli society: Why are Jewish terrorists spared the noose while Arab ones are hanged?​ https://portside.org/2026-04-02/death-penalty-palestinians-israel-signals-long-live-jewish-terrorists

    ​ Israel Has Killed at Least 713 Palestinians in Gaza Since Signing Trump-Backed ‘Ceasefire’ Deal: Health Ministry
    At least one person was killed by Israeli gunfire in Gaza on Thursday​ https://news.antiwar.com/2026/04/02/israel-has-killed-at-least-713-palestinians-in-gaza-since-signing-trump-backed-ceasefire-deal-health-ministry/

    #237145
    John Day
    Participant

    Gaza health ministry warns of imminent collapse as hospitals face fuel crisis​ https://english.palinfo.com/news/2026/04/02/360565/

    7 killed, 26 injured in Israeli strike in Lebanese capital​ – Explosions heard across Beirut, with smoke seen rising from targeted site​ https://www.aa.com.tr/en/middle-east/7-killed-26-injured-in-israeli-strike-in-lebanese-capital/3887480

    Heavy Fighting, Israeli Airstrikes Killed at Least 50 in Lebanon in 24 Hours​ – Health Ministry reports overall toll rises to at least 1,318 killed​ https://news.antiwar.com/2026/04/01/heavy-fighting-israeli-airstrikes-killed-at-least-50-in-lebanon-in-24-hours/

    Death toll from Israeli assault on Lebanon rises to 1,318 victims​ https://english.palinfo.com/news/2026/04/02/360517/

    Israeli Attacks Kill at Least 27 in Lebanon, PM Sees No End in Sight​ – Family of four killed in Nabatieh airstrike​ https://news.antiwar.com/2026/04/02/israeli-attacks-kill-at-least-27-in-lebanon-pm-sees-no-end-in-sight/

    #237146
    John Day
    Participant

    ​ Israeli soldiers’ families say their sons face ‘unreasonable’ conditions in southern Lebanon
    In letter to Premier Netanyahu, families say soldiers ‘are under direct fire amid lack of resources, insufficient air cover’​ https://www.aa.com.tr/en/middle-east/israeli-soldiers-families-say-their-sons-face-unreasonable-conditions-in-southern-lebanon/3889780

    Israeli attacks displace over 1M in Lebanon, 1 in 5 affected: UN refugee agency
    Israeli attacks drive mass displacement and force over 200,000 to flee to Syria in 1 month, spokesperson says​ https://www.aa.com.tr/en/middle-east/israeli-attacks-displace-over-1m-in-lebanon-1-in-5-affected-un-refugee-agency/3889848

    ​ Iran war teaching Taiwan hard lessons about US resolve
    Taiwan getting a vivid glimpse of US power projection failures when tested by an adversary much weaker than China​ https://asiatimes.com/2026/04/iran-war-teaching-taiwan-hard-lessons-about-us-resolve/

    Russia to send second oil tanker to Cuba as energy crisis continues, Moscow says​ https://www.euronews.com/2026/04/02/russia-to-send-second-oil-tanker-to-cuba-as-energy-crisis-continues-moscow-says

    ​ Poland rejects ‘unofficial’ US request to redeploy Patriot batteries to West Asia
    Warsaw argues that redeploying one of its two Patriot systems would ‘significantly weaken’ its defenses​ https://thecradle.co/articles/poland-rejects-unofficial-us-request-to-redeploy-patriot-batteries-to-west-asia

    #237148
    John Day
    Participant

    NATO without America? A slow shift is already underway
    Donald Trump’s foreign policy is not a temporary deviation, but a sign of what is to come​ https://web.archive.org/web/20260401053210/https://www.rt.com/news/636893-nato-without-america-shift/

    ​ Starmer said the “British Empire” is threatened. UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer Gives a National Address – Things Will Never Be the Same Again
    Against the backdrop of the Iran conflict, crisis in the Middle East and the disruption of energy supplies due to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, U.K Prime Minister Keir Starmer held an urgent meeting with British business leaders, finance and bankers as well as U.K insurance leaders. At the conclusion of that meeting, he informed media of a national address.
    ​ During the national address to the people of Great Britain, Prime Minister Starmer emphasized that events in the Middle East have forever changed the landscape of U.K. economic and geopolitical policy. Signaling an inflection point crossed, the British prime minister announced that urgent actions were being taken to mitigate a national crisis.
    ​ Additionally, accepting the U.S. position toward NATO, and the U.K appears to be permanently shifted, Starmer said the British relationship with Europe now becomes critical to their vital national security interests. Against the backdrop of an end to the “special relationship” with America, the Brexit independence from the European Union is now a threat.
    ​ The United Kingdom must find a way to reunite with the European Union, because if it remains alone, without key support and protection from the USA, the British Empire is at risk of collapse.​ https://theconservativetreehouse.com/blog/2026/04/01/uk-prime-minister-keir-starmer-gives-a-national-address-things-will-never-be-the-same-again/#more-282130

    ​ Elon Musk asserts that if you do not deeply comprehend the metallurgy, you are not actually making decisions:
    The corporate world built a religion around one lie. That leadership is separable from understanding. That you can run a machine you cannot read. ​ Musk: “At SpaceX, almost all my time is spent on engineering and design.” Not strategy meetings. Not press tours. Not optics. The weeds. Musk: “If you don’t understand something at a detailed level, you cannot make a decision.”
    ​ If you need someone to translate the problem, you are not the decision-maker. The translator is. You are a rubber stamp with a corner office.
    We built an entire economy rewarding people who speak in abstractions.​ https://x.com/r0ck3t23/status/2039334546815012925

    ​ Mike Mihajlovic at Black Mountain Analysis, Russian officers are Engineers: Notes on Military Education Approaches in Russia and the United States [i]
    ​ A persistent and consequential distinction between the Soviet/Russian and U.S./Western military systems lies in the way their officer corps are educated and intellectually formed… On one side stands a model that treats war as a domain grounded in science and engineering, requiring deep technical literacy. On the other is a model that places greater emphasis on generalist education, leadership, and the broader political and strategic context within which military force is applied. These differing foundations shape not only how officers think, but how they plan, assess, and ultimately conduct operations.​
    ​ In the Soviet and later Russian tradition, military education has long been closely tied to the country’s broader emphasis on mathematics, physics, and engineering. Officers are typically expected to develop a solid grounding in technical disciplines, enabling them to understand the systems they employ at a fundamental level. Weapons are not viewed merely as tools to be operated, but as complex mechanisms governed by physical laws and technical limitations. This approach fosters a culture in which officers can analyze performance parameters, understand system vulnerabilities, and integrate components such as radar, missiles, and electronic warfare into a coherent operational framework. The educational institutions that produce these officers function not only as training centers but also as extensions of the scientific and engineering ecosystem, reinforcing a mindset that treats warfare as an applied technical discipline.​ https://bmanalysis.substack.com/p/notes-on-military-education-approaches

    #237149
    John Day
    Participant

    ​We know. He’s a patsy, but now it’s semi-official: Bullet Used in Charlie Kirk Murder Doesn’t Match The Alleged Weapon, Defense Claims https://www.zerohedge.com/political/bullet-used-charlie-kirk-murder-doesnt-match-alleged-weapon

    AI Is “New Front Door To Commerce” As Consumers Ditch Google For Chatbots​ https://www.zerohedge.com/technology/ai-new-front-door-commerce-consumers-ditch-google-chatbots

    ​A skyscraper “library” with a golden-Trump, and a 747 inside… Eric Trump Shares Remarkable Preview for Trump Presidential Library, Located in Miami https://theconservativetreehouse.com/blog/2026/03/31/eric-trump-shares-remarkable-preview-for-trump-presidential-library-located-in-miami/#more-282088

    ​ Who would Jesus “bomb back to the stone age”? Paula White sparks MAGA backlash after comparing Trump to Jesus
    The presidential faith adviser faced fierce criticism after comparing the president to Jesus Christ during an event at the White House.​ https://www.ms.now/opinion/paula-white-sparks-maga-backlash-after-comparing-trump-to-jesus

    ​ BREAKING STUDY: Half of COVID-19 Vaccinated Military Personnel Suffered Subclinical Heart Stress
    49% of healthy troops in the study experienced a >50% surge in NT-proBNP after two mRNA injections, a key marker of cardiac stress.​ https://www.thefocalpoints.com/p/breaking-study-half-of-covid-19-vaccinated

    #237150
    John Day
    Participant

    ​This cannot be officially discussed. Judge’s Ruling Shuts Down Testimony of People Injured by COVID Vaccines – “We keep getting pushed aside.” https://www.vigilantfox.com/p/judges-ruling-shuts-down-testimony

    As you likely know: COVID-19 “vaccination, despite a potential temporary protection, may have increased mortality” https://jarle.substack.com/p/covid-19-vaccination-despite-a-potential

    ​ Pfizer Halts COVID Shot Trial Because They Can’t Find Enough Test Subjects Willing to Take Another Booster Shot
    Those seeking their 6th booster are now either dead, disabled or have finally ​awakened to reality.​ https://www.thefocalpoints.com/p/pfizer-halts-covid-shot-trial-because

    ​ Due to the judge reversing all advised changes: Meryl Nass MD, The CDC recommends not only a Hepatitis B vaccine at birth for all newborns at no risk, but also for their mothers during the pregnancy if unvaxxed–double dosing the babies!–no risk assessment!
    ​ This is the 5th different vaccine CDC recommends DURING A PREGNANCY that has never been shown to be safe at that time for mother or her fetus.​ https://merylnass.substack.com/p/the-cdc-recommends-not-only-a-hepatitis

    ​Sodas were the most purchased item on SNAP in Texas. New Restrictions On SNAP Purchases To Take Effect In More States In April https://www.zerohedge.com/political/new-restrictions-snap-purchases-take-effect-more-states-april

    #237151
    John Day
    Participant

    ​High Fructose Corn syrup exacerbates gout: What’s the Relationship Between Gout and Sugar? https://www.healthline.com/health/gout-and-sugar

    ​ Soft drinks, fructose consumption, and the risk of gout in men: prospective cohort study
    Results​: During the 12 years of follow-up 755 confirmed incident cases of gout were reported. Increasing intake of sugar sweetened soft drinks was associated with an increasing risk of gout.​ https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC2234536/

    Fructose intake and risk of gout and hyperuricemia: a systematic review and meta-analysis of prospective cohort studies
    Results: 2 studies involving 125 299 participants and 1533 cases of incident gout assessed the association between fructose consumption and incident gout over an average of 17 years of follow-up. No eligible studies assessed incident hyperuricemia as an outcome. Fructose consumption was associated with an increase in the risk of gout.​ https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27697882/

    ​ Psychopaths are often “regular” people, and you likely know some. I Am A Psychopath
    Our difference is obvious to us as children. The world operates on a construct of emotion that we lack. I have often called emotions the temperamental cheat codes to the neurotypical experience. It cuts out a great deal of the weighing information and deciding on actions based on the social outcome. Most people act as their internal directional emotions tell them too, and it makes human interaction much easier; everyone is on the same page.
    ​ We aren’t. Psychopathy is a variant structure of the brain that won’t be evident until after the person reaches twenty-five, and at that time, provided the circumstances are present to allow for it, they can be diagnosed as psychopathic. We lack empathy, we lack fear, sadness, anxiety, remorse, we lack many of the things that explain to you in silent code how to behave around others of your kind, and the world in general.
    ​ Instead we have to either be taught, or figure it out on our own. Nothing neurotypicals do makes sense to us. It’s like trying to figure out a foreign film without subtitles and no scene context. We just begin to mimic.​ https://www.talkspace.com/blog/i-am-a-psychopath/

    ​ 13 min video – Discovering One’s Hidden Psychopathy. James Fallon (2014)
    Neuroscientist James Fallon discusses how he came to discover, and how he’s learned to live with, the fact that he’s a borderline psychopath. Fallon is the author of The Psychopath Inside: A Neuroscientist’s Personal Journey into the Dark Side of the Brain​ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vii60GUGTQU

    #237152
    John Day
    Participant

    ​ US firm making thorium-fueled nuclear reactors to file for NRC license under new regulations
    Ampera’s reactor uses TRISO fuel that does not need to be refueled allowing continuous operation over decades.​ https://interestingengineering.com/innovation/us-ampera-nuclear-firm-nrc-license

    ​ Climate Physicist Anastassia Makarieva looks at Australia and North America. Biotic Pump Q&A #3: Bringing Water to Drier Landscapes – On the positive and negative roles of human interventions https://bioticregulation.substack.com/p/biotic-pump-q-and-a-3-bringing-water

    #237153
    Michael Reid
    Participant

    #237154
    Celticbiker
    Participant

    If anyone is bored or has some time on hand, go over to The Burning Platform and read the Unibomber Manifesto. It’s finally released unredacted. He’s considered a nut, but the kidfucker, jew owned, draft dodging Trumpforeskinstein is President. Clownworld, brought to you by Hollyweird.

    #237155
    zerosum
    Participant

    Even if the US pulls out/goes home, the war with Israel will continue until it no longer poses a risk to Iran with their “Greater Israel”.
    ———-
    The brutal reality, no fuel means living off grid.
    0000000000000
    ———–
    Wake up!
    everyone is spending money that don’t exist.
    ————
    The winners are …
    Two more generals — Hodne (Training Command) and Green (Chaplain Corps) — removed the same day. George replaced by Hegseth’s former personal aide. 26 generals/admirals removed since Hegseth took office. Multiple sources say George was categorically opposed to ground operations.​..
    ————-
    Pick a winner: Hormuz Toll System as de-dollarization engine VS. Trump’s Tariffs to repay $40T
    ————-
    ​ Most Americans want Iran war ended quickly, oppose ground troops: OFF RAMP FOR TRUMP.IT EXIST IN THE LAW.
    Procedures in the House and Senate
    https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/R/R47603

    #237156
    those darned kids
    Participant

    red, white, and maroon..

    #237157
    Michael Reid
    Participant

    #237158
    citizenx
    Participant

    those darned kids sez –
    April 3, 2026 at 11:20 am #237086

    I truly appreciate the open comments, but the content above has become unusable.

    and yet your first comment today 4/3 at 11:20 am to April 4, 2026 at 1:08 am reflects a modern mental illness and a complete waste of human life- yours. You just spent 13 hours of your day here, addicted, obsessed, “posting comments”. What the fuck is wrong with you?

    Same mental illness as DrD- addicted to hearing yourself talk, pissing in the wind, wasting your miserable life. How pathetic.

    It was obvious over a year ago the Raul Illargi is a drunken fraud of a zionist maga retard.
    Raul also fucked up claiming covid lockdowns were great, masking effective, pcr testing mandatory…

    Raul is a retarded pos.

    “I will not raise taxes…. Raises taxes.”

    Trump- “no new wars” so he starts a fucking war.
    “We’re fighting wars. We can’t take care of day care,” Trump said at a private White House event on Wednesday. “It’s not possible for us to take care of day care, Medicaid, Medicare – all these individual things,” he said. “They can do it on a state basis. You can’t do it on a federal.”

    Raul called trump the peace president and claimed he deserved the nobel !!!!!!
    Bahahahahahahahahahhaha FUCK YOU RIM job.
    No Raul, takes trumps cock out of your mouth, and bibis out of your ass… and tell us again how trump wants no new wars and is the good kind of insane.
    bahahahahahahahahahhaha

    Spending all day here, every day- means you are a special kind of retard.
    John day- retarded buddhist virtue signaler could not be more of a hypocrite supporting the garbage here at TAE.

    Get a fucking real life offline morons.

    #237159
    those darned kids
    Participant

    actually, this is where i come to scream at the wind.

    feels good and such..

    how long do you think it takes me to type out a post of this length?

    i do need breaks, you know..

    #237160
    Doc Robinson
    Participant

    US aircraft carrier update –

    USS Ford has reportedly left Croatia after 5 days.

    The USS Bush carrier strike group left the US a few days ago and is “set to relieve the Gerald R. Ford CSG.”

    The USS Lincoln is still “operating from an undisclosed location in the Arabian Sea.”

    The George H.W. Bush CSG is the latest to join the fray, departing Naval Station Norfolk on March 31 for a regularly scheduled deployment, reportedly to U.S. Central Command. Bush is set to relieve the Gerald R. Ford CSG, which has been deployed for more than nine months and departed the Port of Split, Croatia, on April 2 following a five-day port call. The Abraham Lincoln CSG is operating from an undisclosed location in the Arabian Sea and conducting nonstop combat operations against Iran. The Tripoli ARG and 31st MEU arrived in CENTCOM last week, and the Boxer ARG and 11th MEU are transiting the Pacific en route to the Middle East.

    https://xcancel.com/ianellisjones/status/2040137105767116894#m

    #237161
    Michael Reid
    Participant

    This is a pack of lies like no one has seen before

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