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Collapse of Industrial Civilization

Category Archives: Mental Health

Before the Dark

12 Sunday Apr 2026

Posted by xraymike79 in Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Mental Health

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Apocalyptic-Political-Realism, Authoritarian-Decline-Elegy, Capital-Profiteering-In-Catastrophe, Climate-Collapse-Witnessing, Ecological-Omnicide-Implied, Erosion-Of-Democratic-Norms, Institutional-Cowardice-And-Capture, Intergenerational-Moral-Failure, Late-Imperial-Malaise, Neoliberal-Autoritarian-Convergence, Normalization-Of-Cruelty, Surveillance-And-State-Terror, Techno-Bureaucratic-Necropolitics, Terminal-Republic-Dirge

I am not mad—though madness would be kind,
A mercy for the ones who lived to see.
I write before the dark consumes my mind;
My country is not what it used to be.

It started small: his gestures turned to slur,
A crippled man contorted for the crowd.
They laughed. They clapped. We froze—unsure
If sorrow still was righteous, still allowed.

Each day a fresh transgression, fresh offense.
Each night we swore we’d face the dawning day.
The outrage dulled—too endless, too immense.
We learned to live with it. We looked away.

The scholars warned. They’d seen this tale before:
The scapegoat, and the rally round the flag.
We called them prophets, then we barred the door.
But still, we felt the ground beneath us sag.

The machinery was building all along—
The lists, the camps, the buses in the night.
We said the headlines had it mostly wrong,
That this was order. Necessary. Right.

He sold the chaos; cronies bought the dip.
A war declared, withdrawn, the markets swung.
They knew his lies before they left his lips;
The rest of us just watched. God help the young.

They sold the land. They silenced all the science.
The data vanished; graphs dissolved to dark.
They waved away Earth’s burning—smug defiance.
They auctioned off the final national park.

He held the codes, and dangled annihilation—
A city, or a country, or the world.
He made the threat, then basked in adulation.
The mushroom cloud: his flag, not yet unfurled.

We waited for the heroes, for the law.
We thought the courts would hold, the vote would speak.
We told ourselves that someone somewhere saw—
But no one came; the ship had sprung a leak.

It happened slow, then fast, then all at once.
We watched it like a dream we couldn’t break.
Many warned, marched, and shouted out for months.
They saw the flood yet couldn’t make us wake.

The truth is simple, and the truth is cold:
Those who could stop it, did as they were told.

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The Three Tightening Strands Of A Fragile World

05 Sunday Apr 2026

Posted by xraymike79 in Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Mental Health

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Civilization Vulnerability, Climate Extremes, Ecological Overshoot, Energy Geopolitics, Exogenous Shocks, Fertilizer Dependence, Food Insecurity, Geoeconomic Confrontation, Global Supply Chains, Globalization Fragility, Import Dependence, Managed Descent, Maritime Chokepoints, Polycrisis, Risk Multipliers, Security Dilemmas, Socioeconomic Feedbacks, Strategic Resilience, Systemic Collapse, Systemic Risk

Most arguments about the future of modern civilization revolve around timing and trajectory. Is collapse likely by 2100 or merely “possible”? Should we speak of polycrisis, tipping points, or resilience? Beneath the vocabulary, though, the research has converged on a simpler claim: we are running a civilization that is increasingly exposed on three fronts at once. The physical world is pushing back harder. Our social and political systems are responding in ways that amplify that push. And the buffer between “a serious shock” and “an irreversible slide” is thinner than any of us like to admit.

You can call these three strands direct impacts, feedbacks, and exogenous blows. Together, they describe not a Hollywood apocalypse, but a system-driven descent—one that is being designed in real time by the choices we make under the banner of crisis management.

Direct impacts: the background is already shifting

The first strand is the physical world changing under our feet. Climate research has stopped pretending that we can treat temperature rise as a gentle, linear drag on growth; a major UN‑linked assessment, for example, found that “once‑in‑50‑year” heat waves now occur roughly every 10 years on today’s warming, and could happen every 6 years at 1.5°C and every 1–2 years at 4°C. An emerging body of attribution studies finds that, at roughly 1.3–1.4°C of warming, “dangerous” heat is no longer exceptional but a recurring feature of recent years, with 2025’s extreme events remaining at “concerning levels” even in the absence of a strong El Niño. Events that used to sit in the tail of the probability curve are being promoted into the baseline. Coastal cities face chronic flooding and saltwater intrusion long before they are literally underwater, and heat waves that smashed records a decade ago are now being broken far more often, in some regions every few years.

At the same time, the way we feed ourselves has been quietly rewired around these shifting conditions. About a quarter of all food produced is now traded across borders, with international food and agricultural trade carrying on the order of 5,000 trillion kilocalories per year—more than double the level at the turn of the millennium. Per person, the calories embedded in traded food rose from about 930 kcal per day in 2000 to roughly 1,640 kcal in 2021. In other words, hundreds of millions of people now rely on harvests grown far away, under climates and policies their own governments do not control. One study estimated that about 1.4 billion people’s food security already depends on imports, with another 460 million living in places where even ramping up imports can no longer fully cover local production shortfalls.

These are not hypotheticals about 2100; they describe how today’s civilization already works. We have built a global food system whose day‑to‑day functioning assumes that climate‑stressed breadbaskets will rarely fail together, that shipping lanes will remain open, and that buying power will always exist somewhere to smooth over shocks. As extremes become more frequent and overlapping, that assumption weakens. The scaffolding creaks before it snaps.

Socio‑climate feedbacks: how our responses amplify shocks

If the picture stopped there, the story would be grim enough but perhaps manageable. Societies can, in principle, invest ahead of known risks, redesign infrastructure, and spread costs fairly. The second strand is about what actually happens instead when stresses bite.

Faced with shocks, governments and markets reach for tools they know: export bans, interest‑rate hikes, border closures, subsidies for some and austerity for others. Each decision may make sense from the narrow vantage point of a single ministry or central bank. Seen systemically, they behave like feedback loops that amplify the original disturbance. When food and agricultural trade was smaller, the damage from such moves could be contained. Today, FAO estimates that global food and agricultural trade has quintupled in value since 2000, to around two trillion dollars a year, and that traded calories now supply more than 1,600 kilocalories per person per day on average. The upside is efficiency; the downside is that export bans, hoarding, or sanctions in one part of the network ripple far more widely than they used to.

The dynamic is familiar. A drought drives up grain prices. Exporters restrict shipments to protect domestic consumers. Import‑dependent countries panic and buy more than they need “just in case,” pushing prices higher still. Farmers, squeezed by higher input costs, plant less the following season or switch to crops that make sense for their own survival, not for global caloric balance. Financial markets, spooked by inflation, demand higher interest rates, which make it harder for poor governments to cushion their populations. A recent wave of analyses on the Iran war and fertilizer shortages is already warning of such copy‑and‑paste behavior: if Middle Eastern nitrogen exports remain constrained, other producers will be tempted to limit sales abroad or raise prices, turning a local shortfall into a much larger affordability crisis.

Security responses follow a similar pattern. The 2026 World Economic Forum Global Risks Report describes the coming decade as an “age of competition,” with “geoeconomic confrontation” ranked as the single most likely trigger of a major global crisis and extreme weather and ecosystem collapse dominating the long‑term risk horizon. In that framing, a supply disruption is recast as a threat to national security rather than as a symptom of a structurally fragile global system. The answer becomes more patrols, more weapons, more walls. Chokepoints are fortified, not diversified away from. Rivals are sanctioned rather than integrated. The logic of competition colonizes domains—like food and climate—that once had at least the pretense of cooperation.

These feedbacks don’t just add noise; they shape the system’s long‑run trajectory. Consider fertilizer. Persian Gulf states account for roughly 43 percent of seaborne urea exports and about 44 percent of seaborne sulfur trade, with more than a quarter of key phosphate flows also tied to routes that pass near or through the Strait of Hormuz. Agricultural trade analysts estimate that around 25–30 percent of the world’s nitrogen fertilizer exports depend directly on that strait. When conflict there reduces vessel movements “to a trickle,” as some market reports now phrase it, there is no easy way to reroute all those nutrients overnight. Benchmarks for urea in the Middle East and North Africa have already jumped on the order of 19–28 percent in early 2026, and knock‑on price rises have appeared in far‑off markets as buyers compete for scarce cargoes. Farmers facing those costs do not just endure a bad quarter; many cut application rates or shift crops, which means lower yields in subsequent seasons, not just higher prices this year.

From a distance, the result looks like “global instability.” Up close, it is a thousand small acts of self‑protection—export controls, emergency rate hikes, militarized escorts—that add up to a collectively self‑destructive pattern.

Exogenous shocks: the fuse‑lighting events

The third strand is neither climate nor policy in isolation. It is what happens when a civilization already strained by both is hit by something from outside the climate and economic models: a war in the wrong place, a pandemic at the wrong moment, a financial panic that cascades through a web of obligations no one really understands.

In the abstract, societies have always faced exogenous shocks. What is different now is how tightly we have coupled critical systems and how little slack we have left inside them. Energy grids operate closer to peak capacity, with less spinning reserve. Food systems rely on just‑in‑time inputs shipped over long distances. Finance runs on thin capital buffers and opaque derivatives. Social trust has been depleted by years of inequality and broken promises.

In that context, the question is not whether there will be shocks. It is what state the system is in when they arrive. The Iran war is a clear example. One recent climate analysis estimates that the first two weeks of the US–Israel war on Iran released over five million tonnes of greenhouse gases, more than the annual emissions of Iceland and roughly equal to what the world’s 84 lowest‑emitting countries produce in a year. The International Energy Agency has already described the current supply losses as “the largest disruption to oil markets in history,” with several million barrels per day of crude and products taken offline, export‑oriented refineries forced to cut runs, and hundreds of millions of barrels of strategic reserves pledged in a single coordinated release. Physical benchmarks for Brent crude have spiked to their highest levels since 2008, with prompt barrels trading at steep premiums that reflect scarcity at the margin, not just speculative froth.

At the same time, as noted above, roughly a quarter to a third of global nitrogen fertilizer exports and similar shares of sulfur and certain phosphates depend on shipping routes near that same chokepoint. When tankers and bulk carriers suddenly face war‑risk surcharges, cancelled insurance, and missile fire, cargoes are delayed, diverted, or cancelled. FAO’s chief economist has warned that the war is already delivering a “double choke” to global food systems—fuel and fertilizer costs rising together—and that what global markets can absorb for “a few weeks” becomes much harder to manage over months.

Now place those shocks into the social and economic landscape sketched earlier. Nearly two billion people already depend on imported food, with nearly half a billion more living in places where even more imports may soon not be enough. Many of those import‑dependent states are also heavily indebted and exposed to currency swings. Energy and input price increases feed into food inflation and current‑account deficits; higher global interest rates, used to fight inflation elsewhere, raise their debt‑servicing costs. The result is not just pricier groceries. It is fiscal strain, subsidy cuts, and a higher risk of default and unrest. Emerging‑market analysts are already warning that the Iran war’s shock to oil and fertilizer markets, layered on existing climate losses, looks uncomfortably like the pattern that preceded previous waves of sovereign crises.

From the perspective of a climate model, a war in the Gulf is “external.” From the perspective of lived reality in Cairo, Dhaka, or Dubai, it is the moment when a long‑running pattern of vulnerability suddenly cashes out.

Where the strands meet

Taken together, these aren’t three separate stories so much as one system teaching us its own rules. The same feedbacks that drove the food‑and‑fuel spikes of 2008 and the post‑Ukraine shock are still in place; credit, commodity markets, and climate volatility now reinforce one another rather than cancelling out. Recent systemic‑risk assessments of the 2008 and 2022 food‑energy crises reach a similar conclusion: once stresses in climate, energy, and finance interact, they behave less like separate shocks and more like a single, entangled “polycrisis” that standard policy tools are ill‑suited to contain. From the vantage point of households and governments on the receiving end, what matters is not which fuse technically lit first, but how quickly all three burn down together.

Thinking in these three strands matters because it cuts against two comforting illusions.

The first is the idea that physical impacts alone will determine our fate. That story goes: if we can keep warming under a certain threshold, reinforce some infrastructure, and shift technologies, we can muddle through. It underplays how much of the damage will come from our own reactions—panic, opportunism, miscalculation—once stresses bite. The Iran war and its aftermath show that shocks are being run through institutions that are primed to respond in ways that spread, rather than contain, the pain.

The second illusion is the mirror image: that collapse, if it comes, will be entirely of our own making, a story of bad politics and greedy elites that could be fixed with better leaders. That narrative forgets that politics now operates within a moving physical target. There are hard limits to what any institution can deliver on a hotter, more volatile, more resource‑constrained planet. When once‑rare heat extremes become decadal norms, when harvests in multiple breadbaskets are hit in the same season, when aquifers and glaciers that used to buffer dry years are already depleted, there are simply fewer good options on the table.

The reality is messier. We are up against a changing Earth, maladaptive systems, and a shrinking buffer between normal crisis and systemic break. No single strand is decisive on its own. Each tightens the knot the others have made. The physical envelope is tightening as extremes become more frequent and predictable climate bands shift away from where our infrastructure and cropland already are. The institutional envelope is thinning as each shock prompts responses—export bans, militarization, austerity—that help one actor cope while increasing fragility elsewhere. The buffer envelope between “serious crisis” and “systemic break” is shrinking as more people, more calories, and more finance are routed through a handful of chokepoints and high‑leverage actors.

None of the numbers above, taken alone, say “civilization will end.” What they do say is that we now run a world in which a single maritime bottleneck can directly influence a quarter to a third of global nitrogen fertilizer exports and a similar share of key sulfur and phosphate flows, in turn affecting yields across multiple breadbaskets. International food trade moves the caloric equivalent of more than 1,600 kilocalories per person per day, but those flows are highly skewed: many low‑income importers already spend a large share of their export earnings just to pay for food and fuel, leaving little fiscal room when prices jump. At the same time, dozens of countries are in some stage of debt distress or IMF‑brokered adjustment, which means that higher import bills and interest rates translate quickly into cuts in subsidies and social protection rather than new support. In that configuration, sustained disruption does not just raise prices at the margin; it pushes entire regions toward a tighter coupling of climate shocks, balance‑of‑payments crises, and political instability. Risk elites themselves now rank extreme weather, ecosystem collapse, and geoeconomic confrontation as the top long‑term threats and openly describe the present as an “age of competition” with multilateralism in retreat.

Recent crises have shown how much depends on whether leaders treat these shocks as chances to de‑risk the system or as stages on which to project strength. In Washington, the current administration has repeatedly framed the Iran war, its supply disruptions, and even climate change as tests of national resolve or security problems rather than as signs of a system already under structural strain, doubling down on sanctions, emergency reserve releases, and unilateral moves that soothe domestic optics while deepening global exposure. By withdrawing the United States for a second time from the Paris Agreement and now moving to exit the UN climate framework itself, it has deliberately weakened the main forums for coordinating emission cuts and climate adaptation at the exact moment when science says cooperation is most urgent. At the same time, its decision to launch and prolong a Gulf war that has effectively closed the Strait of Hormuz, triggered the largest oil supply disruption on record, and then lurched between maximalist military threats and ad‑hoc sanctions relief has amplified market chaos rather than containing it. Taken together, these are not just controversial policy choices; they are active contributions to a more fractured, hotter, and harder‑to‑govern world, and similar instincts appear in other capitals, where governments prioritize short‑term political cover over investments that would actually widen the buffer between local crisis and systemic break.

Those are the ingredients of systemic vulnerability. Whether they add up to “collapse” depends on how many more shocks we face, and how we choose to respond to each one. Mitigating direct impacts requires decarbonisation and ecological repair at a scale we have barely begun. Soothing socio‑climate feedbacks means redesigning trade, finance, and security arrangements so that self‑protection does not automatically mean harming someone else. Reducing vulnerability to exogenous shocks means rebuilding slack and redundancy into systems that have spent forty years optimizing them away.

None of those tasks will be completed in time to prevent more damage. The point is not to restore the old world. It is to decide, as the corridor narrows, how much room we leave for others, how much agency we retain over the terms of descent, and how honest we are prepared to be about the stakes. We may never get a day when someone can declare, conclusively, that “modern civilization has collapsed.” What we will get, and are already living through, are years in which the three strands tighten or loosen in response to choices that are still, just barely, under human control. The question is not whether the future will be harsher than the past. It is whether we let that harshness arrive as an accident, or recognise it as the cumulative result of paths we chose to keep walking even after we knew where they led.

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A Victory On Paper, A Scarred Gulf

31 Tuesday Mar 2026

Posted by xraymike79 in Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Mental Health

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Agrifood Systems, Chokepoint Warfare, Civilizational Metabolism, Climate And Conflict, Collapse Discourse, Energy And Famine, Energy Geopolitics, Fertilizer Shortage, Global Food Security, Imperial Retrenchment, Industrial Civilization, Iran War, Just‑In‑Time Fragility, Maritime Insurance Crisis, Oil Market Shock, Petrostate Politics, Risk Society, Strait Of Hormuz, Supply Chain Fragility, Systemic Collapse

Peace on a Broken Artery

By now the war in Iran has settled into a grim routine. Tankers inch through militarized sea lanes under the eyes of drones. Jets rise off carriers and desert runways to drop precision ordnance on an already cratered landscape. The Strait of Hormuz, a thin scrawl of water between rock and sand, has become a fault line of global anxiety. Officials in Washington and Brussels still describe it as a problem of “regional stability,” “energy security,” and “deterring aggression.” If you read beyond the podiums and into the fine print of the economic and risk reports, another story emerges. The people who administer this order have started to describe, in careful bullet points and euphemisms, the early stages of its breakdown. They simply refuse to say the word collapse.

In late March, a new line floated out of the White House and friendly media: President Trump is reportedly willing to end the military campaign against Iran even if the Strait of Hormuz remains largely closed.

On paper, that sounds like an exit. In practice, it is an admission that whatever this war’s end state, one of the main fossil‑fuel arteries of industrial civilization will remain damaged. Whether the fighting stops next month or drags on, Hormuz is not going back to what it was in January. Nor, if the architects of this adventure have their way, is Iran.

The question is not whether dismantling or maiming the Iranian state would create chaos along that artery. It is how much of that chaos would be exported into the food and fuel systems that keep billions of people alive.

A Chokepoint as a Systems Diagram

In the public imagination, Hormuz has long been an oil chokepoint: a narrow passage for roughly a fifth of seaborne crude and a significant share of LNG. In practice, it is also a fertilizer chokepoint, a petrochemical chokepoint, and a shipping chokepoint. The Iran war has made that explicit. Iranian missiles, drones, and mines, combined with U.S. and Israeli strikes and a cascading wave of insurance withdrawals, have exposed the strait as a single, brittle joint in a civilization‑scale supply chain. UN agencies now estimate that roughly 35 percent of global crude and nearly a third of fertilizer trade normally flows through Hormuz, and that tanker traffic has fallen by more than 90 percent since the war began.

Since late February, tanker and bulk traffic through Hormuz has collapsed from the usual torrent of oil, gas, and fertilizer that props up half the planet’s metabolism to almost nothing. The IRGC has warned vessels away and carried out at least twenty‑one attacks on merchant ships. War‑risk insurance has been pulled. Crews have invoked their right to refuse to transit. The strait is technically open but effectively closed to normal commerce. And if this campaign succeeds in bombing Iran’s state capacity into rubble, it does not reopen the artery; it hands the coastline to militias and jihadist franchises for whom intermittent hijackings, mining scares, and rocket fire on tankers are tools of extortion, recruitment, and proxy warfare. For them, keeping Hormuz unreliable is not a problem to be solved but a tactic to be used.

The first thing that moves is a price chart on a screen. Futures spike, analysts talk about volatility, and traders front‑run the headlines. In the real world, the shock lands in treasuries and streets. Import‑dependent countries watch their fuel and food bills jump at the same time. Hard currency drains away. Subsidy regimes that kept bread and diesel politically quiet start to unravel. Cabinets fall, parliaments are dissolved, opposition parties and street movements suddenly have an opening. A few months of disrupted nitrogen and diesel have, in the past, helped push vulnerable governments closer to default, revolt, or both. Those shocks don’t stay local. They ricochet through debt markets, migration routes, and security alliances—a handful of missiles and insurance letters in the Gulf rewriting the political order thousands of miles from those troubled waters, after major marine insurers simply pulled war‑risk cover and left hundreds of vessels stranded at anchor.

None of this is speculative. The UN Food and Agriculture Organization calls this ‘a systematic shock affecting food systems globally,’ warning that farmers face a ‘double choke’ of fertilizer and fuel prices rather than a passing scare. Its chief economist says global markets can probably absorb the shock for ‘about two weeks’ before risks of broader food insecurity rise sharply, and that if the conflict and the closure of Hormuz last three to six months, the shocks will be ‘global and harder to manage.’ A UN‑linked analysis flatly states that if the war does not end quickly, ‘global markets could collapse from the high demands for oil and crops,’ as unrelenting need for these inputs collides with war‑constrained supply and pushes the system past what it can absorb.

In their world, the Iran war is no longer a “geopolitical flare‑up.” It is a “global agrifood systems” crisis layered on top of an energy crisis. Translated into English: the bombs are falling in the Gulf, but the shockwaves are moving along the supply lines that keep cities fed and states solvent.

What is missing is a simple sentence acknowledging what those phrases amount to: behold a vast global civilization built across a set of concentrated, brittle lifelines which we are now actively destroying.

Ending the War Without Fixing the Artery

Into this situation comes the new talking point from Washington: that reopening Hormuz is no longer a prerequisite for ending the war. Trump has reportedly told aides he is prepared to conclude the campaign even if the strait remains “predominantly obstructed.” He does not want a drawn‑out effort to clear mines, neutralize coastal batteries, and escort a critical mass of tankers and fertilizer carriers through hostile waters. He wants a short war, a weakened Iran, and an exit.

The theory seems to be that if U.S. and Israeli forces smash enough of Iran’s missile launchers and patrol boats, Tehran will eventually choose to reopen the strait for its own economic reasons or under pressure from other powers. If not, the job of prying it open can be handed off to regional navies and insurance consortia later.

This is what “victory” looks like in the airpower age: decapitate some units, degrade some arsenals, then declare the strategic problem solved while the structural damage remains. In this case, the structural damage is not confined to runways and radar sites. It is a shift in how Hormuz works as a global artery.

Physically, the war leaves behind unexploded ordnance, damaged infrastructure, and an elevated baseline risk of attack. Politically, it normalizes the use of the strait as a weapon. Iran has now demonstrated that it can close or severely restrict traffic when under attack. The U.S. has demonstrated that it will tolerate weeks of closure for the sake of a punitive air campaign. Every future crisis will be negotiated in the shadow of that precedent.

Financially, it bakes in higher war‑risk premia, higher insurance costs, and a secular push to reroute or diversify trade—pipelines through Saudi Arabia and the UAE, more LNG out of the U.S. Gulf, more storage and stockpiling in rich countries. Some of that diversification will succeed. Much of it will not arrive in time for the farmers currently deciding whether they can afford another season of ammonium nitrate.

Ending the war without fixing the artery does not restore the old normal. It crystallizes a new one: a Gulf that is more mined, more militarized, and more obviously central to food as well as fuel. A chokepoint that has been shown to be closable at will, but not reliably reopenable by force within an acceptable timeframe.

From Hostile State to Ungoverned Corridor

War planners like to imagine that the alternative to a hostile regime is a compliant one. In practice, the record of the last twenty years suggests something else: the alternative to an intact adversarial state is often a fractured, semi‑ungoverned space that bleeds instability into the surrounding region.

Dismantling or maiming the Iranian state would not produce a peaceful, demilitarized Gulf. It would turn the country that sits astride one of the world’s key arteries into a patchwork of factions, militias, and proxies with access to missiles, drones, and coastal systems along hundreds of miles of shoreline.

You do not need to believe in a neat “Iraq 2.0” analogy to see the contours. A weakened central government loses its ability to police its own forces and waters. Rival power centers inside Iran—Revolutionary Guard remnants, provincial elites, separatist movements—jockey for control of ports and oil terminals. Outside powers—Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Turkey, Pakistan, Russia—move to back their preferred clients. The IRGC’s current, relatively centralized control over Hormuz is replaced by something more chaotic: multiple actors with both the capability and the incentive to harass shipping.

From the standpoint of global food and fuel flows, this is worse than a hostile but coherent state. A disciplined adversary can threaten closure or limited disruption as a bargaining chip, but it also has a strong interest in collecting transit fees, exporting its own commodities, and avoiding complete economic suicide. A fragmented security environment produces something else: piracy, sporadic attacks, deniable incidents, and a constant background risk that any given convoy will be targeted by someone trying to send a message, settle a score, or shake down a client state.

Think of it as Somalia‑plus‑Strait‑of‑Malacca, sitting on the fertilizer pipe. The fantasy that you can bomb your way to a safer Gulf by “dismantling” the current Iranian state rests on the assumption that the post‑war order will be more predictable than the one it replaces. Nothing in the region’s history, or in recent U.S. expeditionary adventures, supports that belief.

Food, Fertilizer, and the Permanent Premium on Survival

The global food system was already fragile before the first missile flew. Climate change is quietly dialing down yields, even when farmers adapt, with new modeling showing significant declines in major staples under both optimistic and business‑as‑usual scenarios. Supply chains optimized for just‑in‑time efficiency, not resilience, have shown how easily they jam under pandemics and cyberattacks. Hundreds of millions have been shoved back into hunger in the last decade as “overlapping crises” hit systems that had been strip‑mined of slack.

Layer a permanently more dangerous Hormuz on top of this and you change the price of survival. Not just in dollars, but in options.

A Gulf where fertilizer shipments are always a little at risk, where insurance is always a little more expensive, where warships are always a little closer to collision, is a Gulf that quietly raises the floor on global food prices. Poor countries that import both calories and energy see a larger share of their budgets eaten by basic inputs. Governments already inching along the edge of default find that each new drought, each new price spike, each new conflict pushes them closer to the brink.

The FAO’s warning that global markets could “collapse” from unmet demand for oil and crops if the war drags on is not about one bad season. It is about how close the system already is to the edge. A sustained premium on fertilizer and diesel does not just show up in supermarket price tags. It shows up in the choices farmers make about whether to plant at all, and in the choices governments make about whether to subsidize bread or pay bondholders.

From the standpoint of someone who still sees full aisles and stable prices, this may sound remote. But the Gulf remains one of the central organs of the global economy; weakening it badly enough makes the entire system weaker. The same is true of the glaciers that feed Asia’s rivers, the jet streams that steer storms, the topsoil that anchors prairie roots. We are eroding multiple load‑bearing structures at once. The fact that you can still buy strawberries in January does not mean the scaffolding behind them is sound. It means the remaining slack is being spent to preserve the appearance of normality.

Ending the Iran war while leaving Hormuz damaged simply moves that erosion into a new phase. The artery does not have to be completely severed to change the metabolism of the system it feeds. It only has to be scarred enough that each heartbeat is weaker than the last.

Ignoring the Rot

Insisting that collapse is either a Hollywood event or a forbidden topic has been a useful way of keeping it off polite agendas. It is harder to sustain that taboo when the underlying processes are being described, in other words, by the system’s own custodians.

Central banks warn that repeated “supply shocks” could unanchor inflation expectations and constrain their tools. Humanitarian agencies talk about “permanent emergency operations” in regions hit by overlapping food, conflict, and climate crises. UN bodies now say, in plain language, that a few more months of war in the Gulf could push tens of millions into acute hunger and set global agrifood markets on a path toward breakdown. Security analysts frame the Iran war as a “test case” for how long global shipping and insurance can function under sustained missile and drone harassment. Even establishment summaries now warn that prolonged disruption could drive oil toward its previous record, force importing states into rationing, and in the words of one Gulf minister risk “collapse of world economies” if force‑majeure declarations spread.

None of these admissions need the word collapse to be true. But their accumulation makes the refusal to use it look less like caution and more like superstition. As long as we do not say the word, perhaps the thing it describes will not happen.

What does it mean, in that context, to declare peace while leaving a main fossil‑food artery damaged? It means telling ourselves the lie that the crisis was the airstrikes and the headlines, not the long tail of higher prices, thinner margins, and brittle systems they leave behind. It means treating the war as over when the kinetic phase slows, even as the structural consequences continue to compound.

We can, for a while, pretend that this is a return to normal: oil back down a few dollars, markets rallying on talk of a deal, commentators praising “restored deterrence.” We can avert our eyes from the farmers deciding which fields to leave fallow, the governments weighing bread subsidies against debt payments, the families in importing countries watching staple prices climb and never quite come back down.

Or we can call it what it is: another notch in the ratchet of a civilization running a planetary experiment past its design limits. A war that ends on paper but lives on in the arteries it scars.

The choice we face is not between ending the Iran war and preserving the world as it was before. That world is already gone. The choice is between acknowledging that fact and organizing around it, or continuing to accept illusions of victory that leave the underlying systems more fragile each time.

There will be more proposals in the coming weeks: Pakistan‑China peace plans, U.S.‑brokered “de‑escalation frameworks,” legalistic arguments about who should “take over” the job of reopening Hormuz. None of them grapple with the deeper question your stomach already understands better than any communique: what happens to a global civilization when it refuses to see the growing rot beneath its feet?

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The Grocery Aisle at the End of the World

29 Sunday Mar 2026

Posted by xraymike79 in Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Mental Health

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Civilizational Self‑Harm, Climate Risk, End Of Abundance, Energy–Food Nexus, Fertilizer Chokepoints, Food Systems Collapse, Fossil Fuel Dependency, Geopolitics Of Hunger, Global Food Security, Globalization’s Limits, Industrial Agriculture, Iran War, Just‑In‑Time Fragility, Market Fundamentalism, Multiple Breadbasket Failure, Naval Power And Trade, Petrochemical Packaging, Polycrisis, Strait Of Hormuz, Supermarket Politics

How the Iran War Exposes the Food Illusion

For most of us in the rich world, food appears as a solved problem. It arrives under fluorescent lights in infinite variety: strawberries in January, chicken breasts cheaper than dog food, aisles of grains and snacks that never seem to run out. The shelves may wobble in a pandemic or a storm, but they restock. The supermarket is presented as a kind of secular sacrament: whatever else is going wrong, you will still be able to push a cart through a climate‑controlled maze and buy your calories with a card.

The current war on Iran is a reminder that this is an illusion bought on credit from a system that is coming apart. The bombs are falling in the Gulf, but the shockwaves are moving through the fields that feed half the planet. You can’t shell a major fossil‑fuel and fertilizer corridor without hitting the invisible scaffolding of the global food system.

We are used to thinking of the Strait of Hormuz as an oil chokepoint. It is also, quietly, a fertilizer chokepoint. Nearly a third of the world’s fertilizer flows through it, and much of global ammonia and urea production rides on cheap Middle Eastern gas. When that traffic is constrained by mines, missiles, and insurance letters, it is not just tankers that get stranded on the wrong side of the bottleneck. It is next season’s harvest.

Food as a Fossil‑Fuel Machine Wearing a Cornucopia Mask

Strip away the packaging and the recipes and modern food looks less like “nature” and more like a vast fossil‑fuel machine. Food systems now consume something like the emissions footprint of a major geopolitical bloc, and for staple crops like corn and wheat, energy and fertilizer together can make up more than half of the operating costs. On the input side, a non‑trivial slice of the world’s natural gas is devoted purely to making ammonia via Haber‑Bosch, the precursor to synthetic nitrogen fertilizer that props up yields for billions of people. Synthetic agrochemicals and fertilizers are overwhelmingly derived from fossil fuels, and petrochemicals feed straight into the nitrogen inputs that keep industrial yields from collapsing.

By the time food reaches your plate, fossil fuel has been burnt to make the fertilizer and pesticides, to pump irrigation water, to run tractors and combines, to process and refrigerate, to ship in bulk and then distribute to local warehouses and stores. The supermarket aisle is just the final, brightly lit organ at the end of a long fossil‑fueled digestive tract. When that upstream system shudders, the illusion that food is a simple consumer product dissolves very quickly.

The cornucopia mask is not just about what we grow, but how we wrap it. Modern food is entombed in layers of plastic, cardboard, metal and ink that often cost as much as, or more than, the raw calories inside, especially for processed and branded products. The packaging industry is itself a petrochemical enterprise, drawing heavily on oil and gas to make plastics and coatings, and on additional energy to manufacture and move them. In other words, a non‑trivial share of the “food system” is really a packaging system whose main job is to make fragile, just‑in‑time calories look abundant and permanent on the shelf—for as long as the fossil inputs keep flowing.

How the Iran War Hits the Global Dinner Table

The Iran war is already tightening this fossil‑food umbilical cord. Nearly one‑third of the world’s fertilizer normally transits the Strait of Hormuz, and Middle Eastern gas is a key feedstock for ammonia plants around the world. As U.S. and Israeli strikes crater Iranian infrastructure and Iran weaponizes Hormuz, fertilizer shipments are getting stuck on the wrong side of the bottleneck. What first appears as a problem for oil traders quickly becomes a problem for anyone who depends on affordable grain.

One month into the war, the abstraction of “Hormuz risk” has hardened into specific, measurable damage to the machinery that sits upstream of harvests. Iranian missile and drone attacks, U.S.–Israeli bombardment, and Houthi strikes on shipping have turned Hormuz and nearby sea lanes into a zone of chronic disruption rather than a temporary scare. The consequences are already visible in fertilizer and energy markets. As insurance premia climb and sailings are delayed or rerouted, prices for nitrogen products have begun to climb. Plants in gas‑dependent producers from India to Europe are reporting reduced operating rates or temporary shutdowns as input costs spike, while China has tightened export controls to safeguard its own domestic supply.

What looks like a shipping issue on a map is, in practice, a squeeze on the molecules that feed next season’s crops. Farmers respond in the only ways open to them. Some cut back on fertilizer applications and accept lower yields. Others switch to less input‑hungry crops, reshaping planting patterns in ways that may not align with global demand. Many turn to their governments and banks, lobbying for subsidies, emergency credit, or tax relief just to keep planting at all. Each of those adaptations narrows the margin of safety in the harvest to come, especially in regions where soils are already depleted or where recent climate extremes have left fields vulnerable.

For now, most supermarket shelves in the global North still look normal. The lights are on, the coolers hum, the variety remains impressive. But the price tags are beginning to carry the faint echo of Hormuz, as higher energy and fertilizer costs ripple through animal feed, food processing, packaging, and transport. In import‑dependent countries in the global South, the echo is louder and harsher. Governments warn of budget crises as food import bills climb, currencies weaken, and hard choices emerge between paying creditors and paying for grain. Humanitarian agencies quietly brace for yet another round of hunger in places that never really recovered from the last food price spike.

A war that was first sold as a humanitarian crusade to “liberate” the Iranian people and topple a hated regime quickly mutated into a jumble of shifting justifications—deterrence, credibility, non‑proliferation, alliance management, market stability—none of which can bear the weight of what it is actually doing. In practice, it has become a live‑fire demonstration of how tightly global dinner tables are tied to a handful of fossil‑fuel chokepoints. The bill will not arrive this month, or even this year. It will come on the slow schedule of planting seasons and harvests, in the quiet compounding of thinner margins, higher prices, and political systems pushed past their breaking point—up to and including the collapse of governments that can no longer keep food both available and affordable.

Climate Is Quietly Turning Down the Yield Knob

Even if geopolitics were miraculously calm, the biological engine of our food system is being dialed down by climate change. A new generation of climate–crop models, built on higher‑resolution datasets, shows that by the end of this century global yields for staple crops are very likely to fall even under optimistic scenarios. Under aggressive emissions cuts, average yields still decline. Under business‑as‑usual, the odds tilt sharply toward double‑digit percentage losses for most major staples.

Adaptation buys some time and some yield. Farmers can switch crop varieties, shift planting dates, tweak fertilizer regimes, and invest in irrigation where water remains available. But the modeling suggests these measures only offset a fraction of the climate‑driven losses; the rest comes through as a permanent reduction in potential. The sting lies in who pays that price. The poorest countries, many already dependent on food imports, are projected to face some of the steepest drops in agricultural productivity, compounding vulnerability and eroding whatever buffer they still have.

This is what “no slack” looks like in agrarian terms. In the 20th century, bad weather in one region could be covered by surpluses and trade from another. Today, a hotter, more chaotic climate is taking simultaneous bites out of yields across multiple breadbaskets, while wars like the one in Iran make it harder and more expensive to move whatever surplus remains.

The Soft Underbelly of the Grocery Aisle

On top of these biophysical constraints sits a logistics system optimized for efficiency, not resilience. The just‑in‑time grocery model runs on thin inventories, centralized distribution centers, and tightly coupled digital systems that orchestrate orders, routing, and payment. It works astonishingly well when the background conditions are stable. It works astonishingly badly when they are not.

Recent years have already exposed some of these weak points. During the COVID‑19 pandemic, the world produced enough calories on paper, but transport bottlenecks, labor shortages, and border disruptions led to simultaneous food waste and food scarcity. Prices for staples jumped faster than general inflation, pushing basic items out of reach for the poor even where shelves remained mostly stocked.

Cyberattacks have offered a different kind of stress test. When a major U.S. grocery distributor was hit by ransomware, systems went down and deliveries were disrupted to thousands of stores. For a few days, the result looked like a localized version of something much larger: empty or patchy shelves, confused shoppers, managers explaining that the warehouse “just didn’t get the truck.” Industry warnings since then have been clear. The software that runs warehouses, trucking fleets, and point‑of‑sale systems is a soft underbelly; it does not take a state‑level attack to knock a region’s food distribution off balance.

None of this requires a capital‑W World War to show up in the grocery aisle. You get there by accumulation: a fertilizer crunch that quietly trims harvests, an energy shock that thins the ranks of smaller haulers and processors, a ransomware hit that bricks a regional distributor’s routing system, a few governments slamming on export controls when prices spike, and then a round of panic buying when people realize how little slack the system actually has. The result is not cinematic famine but a kind of normalized scarcity: prices that lurch upward and never quite reset, “temporarily unavailable” stickers that migrate across categories, and a widening gap between neighborhoods where the shelves still look full and those where they do not.

Layer the Iran war on top of this and the picture sharpens. Energy prices spike and stay volatile. Fertilizer is scarcer and more expensive. Shipping routes are rerouted or slowed, insurance costs rise, and speculative capital sloshes around commodity markets amplifying each new headline. The just‑in‑time system, designed to minimize costs, now serves as an amplifier for every upstream shock. For households at the edge, “temporarily out of stock” and “permanently out of budget” increasingly blur into the same reality.

The End of the Food Illusion

Collapse is often framed in abstract terms: GDP curves, debt ratios, sea‑level projections in 2100. Food refuses abstraction. When the system that feeds you becomes unreliable, you feel it in your stomach before you see it in a graph.

We are already living through a slow version of that unraveling. Since the end of the last decade, hundreds of millions more people have been pushed into chronic hunger as overlapping crises—pandemics, climate extremes, regional wars, and economic shocks—have hit a food system that had been optimized for efficiency, not robustness. As those crises compound, the comfortable assumption that “the market will sort it out” looks less like realism and more like a superstition.

The Iran war takes this background condition and turns the dial a little further. It stresses a fertilizer and fuel network that is already dangerously concentrated and fossil‑dependent. It raises the probability that future harvests will be smaller, more expensive, or both—not just in Iran or the Gulf, but in importing nations from South Asia to Europe and across Africa. It does all of this against a climate trajectory in which the underlying biological engine of yield is gradually weakening, and atop a logistics system that has repeatedly shown itself brittle under stress.

Look at what is actually being defended as this war grinds on. Naval task forces are deployed to shield tankers and financial markets get emergency life support, but there is no equivalent rapid‑reaction force for fertilizer access or public grain reserves in countries that live harvest‑to‑harvest. The legal and military architecture of globalization was built to protect capital flows and hydrocarbon traffic, not the continuity of basic calories. When those priorities collide, it is always the supermarket, not the bond market, that is allowed to fail first.

None of this guarantees cinematic famine in rich countries. What it does make likely is a world where food becomes a persistent source of anxiety and political instability: prices that spike and never quite come down, shelves that are usually but not always full, governments forced into permanent triage between feeding people and servicing debts. In that world, the supermarket stops feeling like a neutral backdrop to daily life and starts to look more like what it has always been: the most fragile political institution of modern civilization.

You can fudge the inflation statistics, massage the unemployment numbers, and spin the latest military adventure as “successful.” You cannot easily explain away empty shelves and unaffordable staples. While the food illusion holds, citizens can be persuaded that collapse is a fringe anxiety. When it frays, collapse becomes visceral. You don’t have to know where Hormuz is on a map to feel its closure in your kitchen.

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When Worst Case Becomes Baseline

28 Saturday Mar 2026

Posted by xraymike79 in Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Mental Health

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Benjamin Netanyahu, Chokepoint Warfare, Civilizational Overshoot, Climate Constraints, Collapse Trajectories, Donald Trump, Energy Infrastructure, Fossil Fuel Dependency, Future Civilizations, Geopolitical Hubris, Global Stagflation, Gulf Desalination, Industrial Civilization, Iran War, Petrostate Fragility, Regime Change, Resource Depletion, Strait Of Hormuz, Systemic Risk, Water Security

The Iran War and Civilizational Self‑Harm

For decades, worst‑case scenarios about the Gulf lived in the margins of strategic reports and collapse forums. What if a regional war shut the Strait of Hormuz? What if desalination plants were hit, or refineries and LNG terminals were cratered along the coast? The comfort baked into those scenarios was always the same: they were presented as tail risks. Possible, but unlikely. We told ourselves that no serious power would be stupid enough to roll the dice on destroying the very infrastructure that holds up the global economy and keeps tens of millions of people alive in the hottest, driest petro‑region on Earth.

The 2026 war on Iran is busy proving us wrong. What used to be labelled “worst case” now looks uncomfortably like the path of least resistance. The United States and Israel have launched a large‑scale, open‑ended campaign against Iran. Iran has responded by weaponizing the Strait of Hormuz and striking at energy and logistics targets across the Gulf, and regional actors like the Houthis have joined in with their own attacks on shipping and infrastructure, raising the odds that more than just Hormuz will be intermittently or permanently shut. Everyone insists they are still winning. No one seems willing to admit what they are actually burning through.

This is not just another bloody episode in the Middle East’s long history of imperial arrogance and local revenge. It is something closer to civilizational self‑harm: a war of choice that systematically chews up the water and energy systems that industrial society still stands on, at a moment when the planet’s climate and ecological buffers are already strained past anything recognizably “normal.” If we take the dynamics of this conflict seriously, the most probable outcome is not a quick ceasefire and a restored status quo. It is a prolonged, grinding, partly frozen war that leaves the Gulf’s physical infrastructure and political geography mangled, and the resource base for any future complex societies permanently narrowed.

The War No One Thought Through

On paper, the justifications for the attack on Iran are familiar: Iran’s support for armed groups, its missile and drone capabilities, its nuclear program, its refusal to accept its place in a US‑ordered regional hierarchy. Strip away the rhetoric and what remains is a straightforward act of hegemony maintenance. An aging superpower and its key client, unwilling to accept that their ability to dictate terms in the region has eroded, decided to try to bomb their way back to a position of comfortable superiority.

What is striking is not just the brutality of that decision but its intellectual laziness. At no point did the governments involved invite their own publics into a serious conversation about what closing or half‑closing Hormuz actually means, beyond an abstract nod to “higher oil prices.” At no point did they try to grapple, in public, with what a sustained attack on Iranian territory and command structures would do to the logic of escalation. They did not walk citizens through the geography of the Gulf, the co‑location of refineries, export terminals, power plants, and desalination complexes on the same vulnerable coastal strip. They did not ask what it looks like when those nodes, and the tankers threading between them, are all within range of relatively cheap missiles and drones.

Instead, they behaved as though the old rules still applied: that wars could be contained, that oil and shipping would more or less keep flowing, that “deterrence” would be restored after a few high‑profile strikes. Trump and his second‑term cabinet appear to have convinced themselves that a single, spectacular decapitation strike would do the job – kill the supreme leader and a tranche of senior commanders, call on the people and security forces to “take their country back,” and watch the regime fold, a bigger replay of the Maduro snatch‑and‑swap they had just pulled off in Venezuela. They treated Iran’s control of Hormuz, its internal resilience, and the Gulf’s water‑energy dependence as bargaining chips in a cartoon script about toppling dictators, not as the load‑bearing pillars of a tightly coupled global system. That is not strategy. It is magical thinking, welded to the kind of hubris that learns nothing from past regime‑change failures.

Iran, of course, is hardly blameless. Its decision to answer airstrikes and assassinations by mounting its own attacks on shipping, energy infrastructure, and bases across the Gulf was not made in ignorance. Tehran’s leadership knows how fragile the Gulf’s lifelines are. It knows that closing or constraining Hormuz hurts not just Washington and Tel Aviv but its own economy and its neighbors’. Yet it gambled anyway, convinced that demonstrating its ability to turn off the tap—and to survive the resulting shock better than US‑aligned regimes—would strengthen its hand in the long run.

On both sides, the same structural stupidity is at work: a refusal or inability to think beyond the next move in a prestige contest, even when the stakes have obviously migrated into the realm of systemic risk.

Water and Oil: The Same Target

To see how bad this can get, you have to look past the missiles and speeches and focus on pipes, plants, and grids.

The Gulf monarchies are not just rich countries sitting on sand and oil. They are artificial hydrological systems. For many of them, rainfall and groundwater are nowhere near sufficient to support their current populations, let alone their industrial and agricultural sectors. They survive on desalinated seawater: vast plants that suck in the Gulf, strip out salt, and push potable water through networks of pipes into cities, factories, and power stations. In several states, the vast majority of municipal water comes from these plants. Many of those plants share sites and power infrastructure with fossil‑fuel generators and petrochemical complexes. Some are key nodes in national grids.

In such a system, “energy” and “water” are not separable categories. They are the same target. Hit a power‑desalination complex and you do not just dim the lights; you threaten drinking water, sanitation, industrial operations, and the cooling systems of other plants. Damage a major refinery or gas processing facility and you also reduce the ability to fuel and maintain the machinery that keeps water flowing. In a region already pushed to the edge of a habitable climate by rising temperatures and humidity, those links are a matter of life and death.

Even before this war, analysts were warning that Gulf desalination plants were soft, high‑value targets in any serious regional conflict: large, hard to relocate, easy to spot on satellite imagery, and within range of relatively cheap long-range weapons. Now, after weeks of strikes, near misses, and open talk of “hitting the enemy where it hurts,” those warnings no longer sound theoretical. It takes no great imagination to sketch a sequence of events in which certain plants are hit, others are shut down pre‑emptively for fear of attack, and the entire system begins to operate in a state of chronic, fearful under‑capacity.

Overlay that with deliberate or incidental damage to refineries, LNG terminals, export pipelines, and offshore infrastructure, and the picture that emerges is grim: not a brief oil price spike followed by relief, but a sustained, partial crippling of the region’s ability to deliver fuels and water at anything like its previous scale.

The “Worst Case” as the Most Likely Path

Official documents still talk about this kind of scenario as if it were an outlier. Planners plot boxes labelled “low probability, high impact” and tuck the destruction of Gulf infrastructure into them, as though the mere placement on a chart will keep the world from actually going there.

That framing made some sense when the main Gulf risk was a single rogue missile or a terrorist attack. It makes much less sense once multiple state and quasi‑state actors with large missile and drone arsenals are fighting a broad war in and around the region, and once those actors have already demonstrated both the means and the will to hit high‑value infrastructure.

To treat full or partial destruction of Gulf energy and desalination capacity as a low‑probability event now is to cling to an optimism that nothing in the current situation justifies. What the incentives and capabilities now on display actually suggest is that, absent an abrupt and unlikely outbreak of restraint, we should treat something close to the worst case as the baseline.

That baseline does not necessarily entail glassed‑over ruins and cities emptying overnight. It looks more like this:

  • The Strait of Hormuz remains intermittently or structurally constrained for years, with shipping volumes well below pre‑war levels even during “lulls.”

  • Major pieces of export infrastructure and refining capacity on both sides of the Gulf are damaged badly enough that they take years, not months, to restore, if they are restored at all.

  • Key desalination plants and power‑desal complexes are hit directly or disabled by collateral damage often enough that their operators and governments are forced into chronic rationing and costly, ad hoc work‑arounds.

  • Insurance and risk premiums for shipping through the region never return to pre‑war norms, and importers treat Gulf barrels and molecules as politically risky even when they are technically available.

In other words, not a one‑off crisis but a ratcheting down of capacity and trust, with each new round of conflict damaging both the physical assets and the perception of safety around them. In plain terms, this war has enough leverage over oil, gas, fertilizer, and desalinated water that it can push industrial civilization off a plateau and onto a steeper downslope: not a theatrical lights‑out moment, but a sudden loss of altitude from which there is no easy climb back.

What That Means for the Rest of Us

From the standpoint of someone who still sees full aisles and stable prices, this may sound remote. But the Gulf remains one of the central organs of the global economy; weaken it badly enough and the whole body suffers.

A damaged Gulf with weaponized sea lanes and impaired infrastructure means:

  • Higher and more volatile oil prices, because a chunk of cheap‑to‑develop, high‑throughput supply is off the table or politically tainted.

  • Higher and more volatile gas and LNG prices, especially in Asia and Europe, where switching away from Russian flows was already painful.

  • Higher fertilizer prices, because nitrogen and many other inputs are energy‑intensive and tightly linked to gas markets and Gulf producers; that translates directly into higher food prices and lower yields, especially in import‑dependent countries that can’t afford to make up the difference with subsidies.

  • A persistent drag on global economic growth, as energy and food import bills rise faster than incomes and as central banks tighten or hold interest rates higher than they otherwise would to fight cost‑driven inflation.

These are not speculative chains. We have seen weaker versions of them play out already with the war in Ukraine and earlier oil shocks. The difference now is that the systems under attack are both more central and more fragile, and the ecological backdrop is far less forgiving.

For households and workers at the margins, especially in the global South, this will look like a rolling crisis that never quite ends: fuel that stays expensive, transport and electricity that strain already thin budgets, food prices that creep up faster than wages, public services that get squeezed as governments pay more to import the basics. For governments, it will look like an endless series of hard choices between defaulting on debts, cutting social spending, and repressing unrest.

Add those shocks together and you don’t just get a bad recession. You get a break in the curve: a world where energy, fertilizer, and food are structurally scarcer and dearer, and where whole regions start to slide out of the zone where complex, globalized industrial life can be maintained.

Burning the Scaffolding

It is sometimes argued that wars like this, however terrible, are just one more chapter in the long history of empires and resource struggles, and that humanity has always rebuilt. Rome fell, China fractured, and yet centuries later, new centers of power and complexity emerged. Why should this be different?

The answer is that we are fighting this war on a planet that has already been radically altered by our previous rounds of overshoot, and we are fighting it in a way that damages not just resources but the systems that make those resources usable.

Earlier empires exhausted local soils, forests, and aquifers, but the climate system and the global biogeochemical cycles remained broadly stable. The ores they picked over were near the surface and rich. The rivers and seas they sailed were mostly clean. When those arrangements failed, there were still vast margins of unused capacity elsewhere, and the energy gradient available from fossil fuels remained untapped.

Today, the situation is different. The climate is hotter and more chaotic. Ice sheets and glaciers are committed to long‑term loss. Ocean ecosystems are stressed. The most accessible fossil deposits and ore bodies have been mined or are in decline. The great old‑growth forests that once buffered weather and hydrology have been cut back to archipelagos.

On top of that, we have built a single, tightly coupled global economic system, stitched together by shipping lanes, pipelines, and just‑in‑time logistics, all resting on a fossil energy base. The Gulf is one of the key nodes where that base still sticks above the waterline. It is also one of the places where the mismatch between natural habitability and current population and infrastructure is most extreme.

To launch a war that seriously degrades that node—its export capacity, its desalination output, its internal stability—is to burn part of the scaffolding that holds up the entire structure, at precisely the moment when there are no obvious replacements and no climatic slack left to soak up the shock.

Future societies will not, as a result, face the same menu of options our grandparents did. They will inherit a planet whose physical systems have been pushed harder, and a built environment that has been selectively smashed in ways that make some paths back up the complexity ladder far more difficult. They will have to rebuild intricate water‑and‑energy systems in a climate that is more hostile and with ore grades and easy fuels already exhausted. They will have to contemplate reopening trade routes and chokepoints that have a recent history of being turned into weapons.

That is the legacy being forged right now—not just in the carbon we pour into the air, but in the infrastructure we pulverize and the institutions we discredit.

The Stupidity of It All

It is tempting to search for some hidden rationality in this mess: a theory that, beneath the bluster, the planners have truly weighed the risks and decided that the gains are worth it. But the more you look at the decisions that led here, the less that story holds.

Launching an unjustified war on Iran—without a direct attack on US territory, without an imminent nuclear breakout, without even the fig leaf of a UN mandate—was already a moral and legal disaster. Doing it in full knowledge of how dependent the global economy remains on Gulf energy and shipping, and how the Gulf’s water and power systems are entangled, is something worse. It is an admission that the people steering the most powerful militaries and economies on Earth no longer take seriously the idea that there are planetary limits or systemic tipping points that apply to them.

They act as if there will always be more infrastructure to burn, more sea lanes to reroute, more climate slack to absorb another decade of chaos. On the other side, Iran’s leadership acts as if it can play the “oil weapon” and the “chokepoint card” forever, as if its own population and neighbors will somehow be spared the worst knock‑on effects of wrecked plants and poisoned trade routes.

There is a word for this, but it isn’t realism and it isn’t grand strategy. It is a cultivated, structural stupidity: an elite incapacity to see beyond the next news cycle, willing to gamble the water, energy, and trade systems that keep billions alive for the sake of domestic posturing and a long‑nurtured vendetta. For three decades, Benjamin Netanyahu has made Iran his favorite enemy, repeatedly insisting it was “three to five years” from the bomb and pushing for US strikes that even his own security chiefs often opposed. In 2026 he finally got the American president he wanted: Trump, persuaded in the Oval Office that a single “historic” decapitation strike would shatter Iran’s leadership and trigger a Venezuela‑style collapse, with loyalists melting away and a grateful populace welcoming a new order. That is not strategy. It is the hubris of two men who learned nothing from Iraq, nothing from the failed coup play in Caracas, and nothing from decades of crying wolf about Iran—now gambling not just with other people’s lives but with the fragile plumbing of the global energy and water system.

No Clean Reset

Those who still cling to a cyclical view of history might tell themselves that after this war, the Gulf will eventually rebuild; that pipelines can be laid anew, plants reconstructed, alliances reshuffled; that in a century or two, some new equilibrium will emerge. Maybe it will. But it will emerge on a planet whose climate is more hostile, whose ecosystems are more depleted, and whose resource and infrastructure base has been deliberately, not accidentally, thinned.

There is no clean reset waiting on the far side of this. There is no guarantee that after we are done smashing the machinery that feeds, waters, and powers us, future generations will be able to assemble something similar from the broken parts and the harsher world we leave behind. There may indeed be future civilizations with roads and walls and writing and hierarchies. They may even look back at our ruins and tell themselves stories about our arrogance and fall.

What they will not have is the same breadth of options. The floor they stand on will be thinner, the climate stranger, the margins for error tighter. And one of the reasons for that will be this: at a late, fragile moment in the fossil‑fueled experiment, the current custodians of the system chose to fight a reckless, unjustified war over dominance in a region that could have been used to cushion a difficult descent. They chose to bomb the scaffolding instead of climbing down.

There is still time, in theory, to pull back from the most extreme branches of that path—to stop hitting the water and energy organs of the Gulf, to accept that hegemony is over, to start thinking like a species that understands it has to live within limits. Nothing in the current behavior of the governments involved suggests they are interested.

When worst case becomes baseline, collapse is no longer a hypothetical to warn about. It is the edge of the cliff we have already driven onto, the destination embedded in the choices being made right now, in full view, by people who have everything but have learned nothing.

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No Clean Reset: War, Climate, and the Next Civilizations

28 Saturday Mar 2026

Posted by xraymike79 in Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Mental Health

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Anthropocene Ruins, Biomass Constraints, Civilizational Overshoot, Climate Irreversibility, Ecological Succession, Empire And Collapse, Energy Descent, Fossil Fuel Dependency, Future Civilizations, Geophysical Limits, Iran War, Irreversible Extinction, Novel Ecosystems, Peak Minerals, Planetary Boundaries, Post Fossil Empires, Resource Envelope, Strait Of Hormuz, Thermodynamic Limits, War And Energy

After the Fossil Age, Future Civilizations Stand on a Thinner Floor

There’s a comforting story that circulates in collapse circles: even if this version of industrial civilization is doomed, the planet will eventually reset. The fossil binge will end, forests will return, the climate will cool, and in a few centuries or millennia new Romes and Han Chinas will rise on a refreshed Earth, running on biomass and clever agriculture instead of oil and gas.

It’s an attractive story, not least because it reframes our crisis as a rough transition between cycles, not a one‑off singularity. But I think it only works if you underplay three things: how slowly climate and ecosystems actually recover on human timescales, how limited a biomass energy system really is for complex societies, and how much irreversible damage we’ve already baked into ice sheets, species, and the periodic table.

The current Iran war throws all of this into sharper relief. A single regional conflict at one energy chokepoint is hammering the global system: Hormuz is effectively shut or heavily constrained, a fifth of world oil and a huge share of LNG are at risk, and analysts are already talking about a second great energy crisis with stagflationary overtones. The ferocity with which an aging hegemon is willing to gamble global stability to keep the fossil tap open tells you something about how little slack is left.

If we want to think honestly about future civilizations, it has to start here: with the actual physics and biology of the coming centuries, not with a generic image of “nature healing” after we exit the stage.

Cooling Into a Different Planet

Climate models agree on one big point that optimists and pessimists both tend to blur: if we actually stopped net greenhouse gas emissions, global warming would not keep rising indefinitely. In most runs, once net emissions drop to zero, the temperature curve flattens and then very slowly drifts down. The planet doesn’t keep screaming upward for centuries on autopilot; it plateaus, and in some scenarios it cools a bit.

An MIT analysis of zero‑emissions trajectories, for example, finds that if emissions stopped, global temperature would typically stop rising within a few decades, but stay elevated for centuries, with maybe half a degree of cooling over 250–300 years in ambitious cases. The direction reverses; the slope is shallow. For any society trying to re‑aggregate in 2200 or 2500, the baseline isn’t “back to Holocene normal,” it’s “still significantly warmer and hydrologically weirder than the climate that fed Rome and Han.”

The same “yes, but slowly” pattern applies to ecosystems. Secondary forests can re‑establish surprisingly fast in the absence of chainsaws, cattle, and bulldozers. Some work suggests substantial canopy and biomass recovery within a few decades in parts of the tropics, and large carbon gains over the first 60–100 years. Landscapes we’ve brutalized really can green up at a speed that would shock most people’s intuitions, and collapse itself does remove some of the relentless pressure that kept systems from catching their breath.

Where this diverges from the “clean reset” picture is in what those recovering systems actually look like, and how far they get you toward the resource base that powered pre‑fossil empires. Old‑growth, structurally complex forests that store immense carbon stocks and provide stable flows of fuel, game, and other biomass services are millennial projects, not 60‑year ones. A regrowing 80‑year forest can look lush to the eye and still be a fraction of the ecological and energetic capital of a genuinely ancient woodland. So yes: the “thinner resource base” of the immediate post‑collapse decades can fatten up. But on realistic timescales it will likely level off at a different height than the pre‑industrial benchmark, and in ways that don’t map neatly onto ambitious but fleeting human political projects.

The Limits of a Biomass Renaissance

In thermodynamic terms, collapse optimists have a point: biomass is renewable in a way that fossil fuels aren’t. The energy income is annual sunlight, not the condensed ghost of Paleozoic swamps. That’s not a trivial difference.

But biomass is only functionally renewable for complex societies if three conditions hold at once:

  1. Harvest stays at or below ecological regrowth rates.

  2. Those same landscapes don’t also have to feed a similarly large human population.

  3. You solve the power‑density problem: biomass is low‑density and scattered; running industrial‑scale infrastructure on it takes a lot of land, logistics, and labor.

Historically, pre‑fossil agrarian states constantly crashed into those constraints: wood shortages for shipbuilding, charcoal for metalworking, fuelwood around cities, soil exhaustion on frontiers. They “ran on biomass,” but they also ran through forests and soils faster than those could rebuild as population and urban complexity rose. Coal, oil, and gas were the cheat code that suspended that feedback for a couple of centuries while artificially propping up modern civilization. High‑EROI fossil fuels underwrote the surplus that made large, complex industrial systems possible, and as EROI declines across fossil and many alternatives, maintaining that level of complexity becomes progressively harder.

When you look at modern assessments of sustainable bioenergy potential, even in well‑governed, data‑rich countries, a pattern emerges. Under optimistic assumptions about yields, technology, and governance, sustainably harvested biomass typically covers only a fraction of total energy demand—on the order of a quarter to perhaps two‑fifths—nothing like the fossil‑era peak. Historical and technical reviews underline why: low power density, competition with food production, water limits, and ecological damage put hard boundaries on how far societies can scale biomass before they start replaying the same deforestation and soil‑mining patterns that plagued pre‑fossil empires.

Collapse advocates sometimes sketch a “stair‑step” future: collapse, abandonment and reforestation, then a new biomass‑powered civilization rising on the regrown energy base. There’s something right in that image. Abandoned land does green; secondary forest growth in many places really can offset a non‑trivial share of deforestation‑driven emissions. But it’s one thing to use that regrowth as a carbon sink. It’s another to run a civilization on it.

Fragmented post‑collapse societies, even with centuries of regrowth behind them, are unlikely to squeeze dramatically more usable energy out of the biosphere than modern studies think possible without repeating the same mine‑the‑land pattern that hammered Rome’s hinterlands. The staircase is real, but each future step up is likely to be smaller than the one before, because the overall resource envelope keeps shrinking.

So yes: biomass likely gives future civilizations a non‑trivial, renewable energy floor. It does not give them back the same stair height we just fell off.

Irreversibility: Ice, Species, Ores

When I say “permanently shrunken envelope,” I don’t mean “no recovery at all.” I mean that some of the damage is path‑dependent and non‑linear in ways that don’t simply unwind if we wait a few centuries.

Lose ice sheets, rearrange ocean circulation, push biomes poleward, acidify oceans, extinguish keystone species, and you don’t walk back to the 8,000–1800 CE climate by waiting 200–500 years. The IPCC’s Special Report on the Ocean and Cryosphere is blunt about this: many ocean and cryosphere changes – ice‑sheet and glacier mass loss, ocean warming and acidification, permafrost thaw – are effectively irreversible on timescales relevant to human societies, even if warming stops. Ice sheets would take centuries to millennia to regrow; sea‑level rise and deep‑ocean warming keep intensifying long after emissions cease.

Even if global temperature nudges downward, the pattern of rainfall, monsoons, river regimes, and extremes is unlikely to simply revert. For staple crops, that pattern matters as much as the global mean. AR6’s water‑cycle chapter shows with high confidence that warming intensifies both very wet and very dry events and shifts where heavy rain, drought, and runoff extremes occur, with strong regional changes in monsoon behavior and seasonal flows rather than a simple, uniform scaling with global temperature. Those changes in variability and extremes track directly into food production and staple crops.

On the biosphere side, extinction is forever. The exact web of species interactions, soil microbiomes, and cheap, easily accessible mineral and fossil resources that early empires leaned on will not be recreated just by letting ecosystems grow back on their own. The IPBES Global Assessment underscores that extinction and many forms of biodiversity loss are irreversible on human timescales, and that ecosystems are being reorganized into “novel” assemblages rather than returning to historical baselines, even where biomass regrows.

On the geochemical side, work on “peak minerals” argues that we are progressively exhausting high‑grade, easily accessible mineral deposits – iron, copper, phosphates among them – forcing a shift to lower‑grade ores that require much more energy, water, and capital to exploit. In this literature, peak minerals is less about running out in a physical sense and more about reaching the point where rising costs, environmental damage, and social resistance stop production from keeping up with demand, even if technology improves. Terrestrial mineral deposits are non‑renewable on human timescales; production in many cases eventually hits a peak, after which it becomes harder and costlier to expand supply. Our nitrogen economy, meanwhile, has been rebuilt around the Haber–Bosch process, which fixes atmospheric nitrogen at enormous fossil‑energy cost.

Put differently: the envelope may widen somewhat relative to the immediate post‑collapse trough, but physics, biology, and geology together do not hand future societies the same slack our ancestors enjoyed.

War as Accelerant, Not Reset

Enter the Iran war. On paper, it’s “just” another Middle Eastern conflict. In practice, it functions as an accelerant and a stress test for a global system already up against its limits.

By most accounts, the conflict has effectively choked the Strait of Hormuz: missile attacks, mines, and the withdrawal of insurance cover have slashed tanker traffic and pushed up risk premia for any ship entering the Gulf. Roughly 20% of global oil trade, a major share of LNG (especially Qatari exports), and a significant fraction of petrochemical flows depend on that chokepoint. Recent policy and market analyses warn that a closure lasting even a few months could become “the single‑largest and most consequential energy and supply chain disruption in modern history,” tightening petrochemical and fertilizer markets, driving up fuel and food prices, and setting the stage for a global stagflationary episode. Asia is particularly exposed: more than four‑fifths of the crude that normally transits Hormuz heads to Asian buyers, and commentators describe the shutdown as an “existential threat” to key Asian economies rather than a localized shock.

Because more than a quarter of global nitrogen fertilizer trade and around a fifth of LNG flows through Hormuz, several analyses already flag rising fertilizer costs and food‑price inflation as a direct second‑order effect of the closure.

What the war reveals is not just geopolitical folly; it’s structural fragility. A single regional conflict can, in weeks, threaten to pull down the scaffolding of global trade and finance because that scaffolding is built around just‑in‑time fossil flows through a handful of narrow straits. That’s what it means to live near the limit of a resource envelope: the system becomes exquisitely sensitive to relatively small shocks.

It also shows our civilizational instincts under stress. Faced with declining ecological slack and a narrowing climate window, the default response of the dominant powers has not been to deliberately downshift energy use and reorganize economies around lower throughput. It has been to double down on force projection to defend the old configuration, even at the risk of catalyzing the very collapse we dread. The Iran war is the global system burning future options – political, ecological, and energetic – to keep today’s arrangement alive a little longer.

From the perspective of future civilizations looking back, this matters. A collapse driven partly by wars over the last easy barrels and the last unobstructed straits leaves a different inheritance than a purely “soft” power‑down. More infrastructure ruined, more emissions, more extinctions and toxic legacies, more hate wired into borders and mythologies. Less to work with, more reasons to repeat the same patterns.

Future Romes on a Thinner Floor

So when I talk about a “permanently shrunken envelope,” I’m not saying that nothing recovers. Forests regrow, rivers detoxify, soils rebuild organic matter, and temperatures may edge down over long spans. Secondary forest carbon stocks can rise dramatically over the first century or two, and recent work suggests tropical forest regeneration can offset perhaps a quarter of deforestation and degradation emissions. Rivers can respond surprisingly quickly once pollution inputs fall.

What I am saying is that the combination of a hotter, more chaotic climate; reassembled and partially impoverished ecosystems; mined‑out high‑grade ores; and a depleted stock of social trust and institutional capacity means that future complex societies will have to operate inside a narrower corridor of possible configurations than the one we inherited.

In that corridor, empires are not impossible. They are more brittle. A world without cheap, dense fossil fuels, with more erratic monsoons and river flows, with fewer big, stable old‑growth biomes to treat as “waste space,” and with ore grades ground down by centuries of extraction leaves less margin for bad harvests, epidemics, and political stupidity. Each rise of centralized power would sit on a thinner resource base and a more volatile Earth system than Rome or Han ever had to contend with.

The crop‑genetic legacy we’re passing on complicates this further. On the one hand, we are bequeathing cultivars and agronomic know‑how that can, in principle, handle more heat and drought, which is a real gift to whatever comes next. On the other hand, if you inherit stress‑tolerant, high‑yield crops, the cultural memory that “expansion is possible again,” and still‑tight biophysical limits, you’ve also inherited a very efficient engine for re‑running the overshoot cycle, only faster. The haunting doesn’t just come from ruins. It comes from how easy it is, once conditions improve a little, to rebuild the very social logics that ate the last world.

From that vantage point, the current Iran war reads less like the prelude to a cleansing reset and more like an example of overshoot behavior in its terminal phase: a system using up its remaining slack – oil, political capital, atmospheric space – in a bid to keep its present shape. It accelerates the burn of what’s left and further locks in some of the path‑dependent damages that will constrain our successors.

There may still be future Romes. But each one will stand on a thinner floor, in a stranger climate, with less margin for error when it comes to repeating old mistakes.

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The Chokepoint That Feeds the World

26 Thursday Mar 2026

Posted by xraymike79 in Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Mental Health

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Agrarian Capitalism, Civilizational Unraveling, Climate Tipping Points, Ecological Macroeconomics, Energy Geopolitics, Fertilizer Shock, Financialization Of Scarcity, Food System Fragility, Imperial Core And Periphery, Just-In-Time Collapse, Long Emergency, Metabolic Rift, Nitrogen Economy, Overshoot And Limits To Growth, Planetary Boundaries, Political Demography Of Hunger, Slow Violence, Strait Of Hormuz, Systemic Risk And Cascade Failures, War And Food Security

The Year the Buffer Ran Out

A few years ago, the scientists who coined the idea of planetary boundaries updated their scorecard and basically stamped “OVERSHOOT” on seven out of nine dials. The climate boundary? Breached. The biodiversity boundary? Smashed. Land‑system change, freshwater, nutrient cycles, chemical pollution? All outside the “safe operating space” that was supposed to keep this civilization from wobbling into something less cooperative. Only ocean acidification and stratospheric ozone were still technically inside the lines, and even that felt temporary.

The climate crowd, for their part, quietly retired the fantasy that we might “avoid” 1.5 degrees of warming. Now the respectable position is that we will transgress it—briefly, tastefully, like a banker wandering into the wrong neighborhood—before using as‑yet‑unbuilt technologies and quixotic policies to nudge the thermostat back down. In the background, modelers talk about tipping points: Greenland’s ice sheet, the Amazon rainforest, the Atlantic overturning circulation, coral reefs. Most of those papers come with the same soothing phrases: there is “still a window” to keep the risks “manageable.”

Then the window closed on at least one of them. The first real climate tipping point we actually hit was not a Hollywood ice‑shelf collapse but the quiet, near‑irreversible death of most warm‑water coral reefs. A slow fade in color, a cascade down food chains, and an unceremonious downgrade from “critical ecosystem” to “regrettable loss” in the global risk report.

None of this was treated as an emergency. It was treated as a footnote to “business as usual.”

Now, into this already‑blown buffer, we have decided to fire a war. Not just any war, but one on the chokepoint that feeds the world.

We have taken a conflict over power projection and regional hegemony and positioned it directly on top of the artery that feeds the nitrogen habit of modern agriculture. We have closed, half‑closed, or at least spectacularly booby‑trapped the Strait of Hormuz, and then feigned surprise when the shock waves propagated from oil to gas to fertilizer to food.

You do not get to call that “a bad year for farmers.” Not when you do it on a planet that has already spent its metabolic slack.


Epic Fury Meets the Nitrogen Century

The honest way to describe what’s happening in and around Iran is to admit that we have turned the single most important maritime chokepoint of the fossil era into a live‑fire demonstration of what it means when ‘just‑in‑time’ finally runs out.

Hormuz was never just about oil. It was the exhaust pipe of the nitrogen century.

The story is simple enough. Take cheap gas in the Gulf. Run it through ammonia plants and urea granulators. Load the resulting white powder onto bulk carriers. Send it through that narrow strip of water past Iran’s shoreline to India, Brazil, East Africa, Southeast Asia, the U.S. Gulf. Turn gas into calories by way of the Haber‑Bosch process and a few shipping lanes. Call the result food security, and hope no one notices that you have hitched the fate of billions to a corridor you can cover with a child’s thumb on a map.

Epic Fury breaks that illusion.

You cannot bomb refineries and export terminals, threaten tankers, yank insurance, and then pretend the only relevant metric is how many Iranian barrels are “off the market.” The same drones that light up an oil storage farm also light up the financial model of every farmer trying to decide whether to buy nitrogen this season. The same closure threat that diverts LNG cargoes also chills shipments of ammonia, urea, and sulfur. The straight line from Kharg Island to a field in Illinois or Punjab is not metaphorical. At the far end, it arrives as a load of nitrogen and a farmer doing the math on what to starve: the soil or the family budget.

We are very good at tracking one end of this chain. Analysts appear on television to explain how many millions of barrels per day are disrupted, how many dollars per barrel that adds to Brent, how much of that will show up in the CPI print two months from now. They have charts, acronyms, pretty colors.

We are less good at tracking the other end, where a farmer stares at a fertilizer quote and quietly decides to plant less, or not at all.

That’s where the nitrogen century bleeds into something else: a world in which the marginal tonne of urea is not an input into yield, but a political accelerant splashed over already dried tinder.


From Price Shock to Hunger Map

Economists like to talk about “pass‑through.” The price of this passes through to the price of that, until somewhere down the line a consumer either pays more, buys less, or goes without. In the case of fertilizer and fuel, the pass‑through path runs straight across the global hunger map.

Start with the input shock. Fertilizer prices spike. Diesel and electricity, both tethered to the same war‑inflamed energy markets, do the same. For a rich, mechanized farm, this is a margin problem. For everyone else, it’s a decision about how much risk they can stack on top of a life that already runs on razor‑thin buffers.

So the compromises begin.

A Midwestern grain farmer shaves application rates, shifts marginal land out of the most nitrogen‑hungry crops, delays a purchase and hopes the market calms down. A medium‑sized operator in Brazil takes on more debt to keep yields up, betting that export prices will bail them out before the bank comes knocking. A smallholder in West Africa or South Asia walks into a rural supply shop, learns that the cost of a bag of fertilizer has jumped by a third since last season, and walks out with half as much, or none.

The agronomists can tell you what happens next. Lower application rates mean lower yields, especially on depleted soils already abused by years of overcropping and climate stress. Fields that would have produced exportable surpluses shrink down toward subsistence. In some cases, marginal land doesn’t get planted at all, because the input costs can no longer be justified against the likely harvest and the going market price.

A few months later, this shows up as numbers on a screen. Wheat prices edge higher. Rice trades in a nervous band. Maize does its own little jittery dance. Commentators ask whether this will be “another 2008” or “another 2011,” meaning: will there be bread riots in the places where Western correspondents are present.

What they rarely say is that for a lot of people, it doesn’t take an actual riot to mark the beginning of collapse. It takes a quiet, grinding recalibration of what a family can afford to eat. Fewer meals with animal protein. Thinner stews. Children whose growth curves diverge from the chart of linear development.

This isn’t hypothetical. The last big food‑price spikes helped topple governments or at least destabilize them across North Africa and the Middle East. They played into the politics that produced wars which then produced more food shocks. We live inside a loop, not a line.

Now layer that loop on top of a planet that has already blown past its safe nitrogen, freshwater, and land‑use boundaries. We are not pouring more fertilizer into a forgiving, under‑used substrate. We are trying to maintain yields on exhausted soils, in climates whose rainfall patterns have slipped their old habits, with aquifers already draining. That means any reduction in inputs has more bite than it would have had thirty years ago. The margin for error is gone.

Call it what it is: not just “food insecurity,” but an early‑stage default on the promise that the industrial food system could keep real political collapse localized and rare.


States on the Fault Lines

Civilization does not collapse everywhere at once. It goes down along the seams.

Some of those seams are obvious: low‑income countries that import a large share of their calories, earn foreign exchange by exporting a narrow set of commodities, and sit in climate‑vulnerable latitudes. Others are less dramatic but just as real: middle‑income states carrying unsustainable debt loads, with brittle coalitions in power and large, angry urban populations one price shock away from taking the streets.

The fertilizer crisis touches both.

In the most exposed states, governments are now staring at a familiar trilemma. They can:

  1. Subsidize fertilizer and food to keep farmers planting and consumers fed, and watch their fiscal position deteriorate even faster.

  2. Let prices rise and hope that a mix of charity, remittances, and stoicism will keep the lid on.

  3. Go begging—to the IMF, to Gulf monarchies, to Beijing—and accept whatever conditionality comes chained to the relief.

Option one buys time at the cost of solvency. Option two risks immediate unrest. Option three trades sovereignty for cash.

None of this shows up in the dignified abstractions of the energy and climate summits. There, leaders talk about “just transitions” and “food system transformation” as if they were simple software upgrades, when most of what’s actually on offer amounts to hasty patch jobs on a visibly failing system in countries where one failed rainy season or one spike in bread prices can turn a demonstration into a coup. The institutions built to protect their interests all quietly converge on the safer option. Big rhetoric, tiny, reversible tweaks.

Meanwhile, the same war and climate shocks that are driving fertilizer prices up are blowing holes in export revenues and remittance flows. If your state relies on oil, gas, tourism, or emigrant wages to pay for food, and those inflows suddenly wobble, your ability to cushion a fertilizer shock vanishes quickly.

In a handful of places, the outcome will be formal: governments will fall, parliaments will be dissolved, juntas or “transitional councils” will stride in, promising order. In many more, the collapse will be informal: services degrade, police become more predatory, militias and gangs provide the only consistent governance in certain neighborhoods or regions. The flag still flies; the capacity behind it rots.

We will, of course, have expert commentary about each instance. Analysts will note the role of corruption, ethnic tensions, historical grievances. They will be right, as far as they go. But they will almost always treat the food and fertilizer dimension as an exacerbating factor, not as a central driver, and they will almost never draw the line from an airstrike on a refinery to a child tearing a piece of bread in half so it can be shared four ways.

That’s how systemic collapse hides in plain sight. Not as a single event, but as a pattern of “domestic crises” that just happen, inexplicably, eating away the edges of the global system at the same time.


A Civilization That Modeled Basis Points, Not Bread

If you want to understand why we are here, you could do worse than to compare the sophistication of our financial risk models to the poverty of our thinking about food and ecology.

We can price a credit default swap down to the fourth decimal place. We can simulate how a quarter‑point move by a central bank will ripple across ten years of bond yields, equity valuations, and currency pairs. Traders lose their jobs for misjudging volatility by more than a sliver.

By contrast, our public‑facing food and climate plans are mostly performance. The grand frameworks—‘sustainable intensification,’ ‘nature‑based solutions,’ ‘climate‑smart agriculture’—work like mirrors, letting every government and corporation greenwash itself while carrying on with business as usual.

The planetary boundaries research community has been waving a giant red flag for more than a decade, saying, in effect: the room you think you have is imaginary; the buffer is gone. Policy has responded by crafting yet another report.

When the conflict around Iran erupted and the fertilizer shock came into view, there was no meaningful sense that we had baked this scenario into our supposed resilience plans. The war gamers had drawn arrows on maps showing how oil would move and how naval forces would respond; almost no one had drawn the arrow from a shuttered ammonia plant in the Gulf to a shortened planting season in sub‑Saharan Africa. The agrifood agencies have been dutifully warning about “cascading risks,” but they don’t get invited to the tables where people decide whether to launch the next strike; then, when the entirely predictable fallout arrives, the president goes on television to insist that “nobody could have seen this coming.”

So we fall back on the vocabulary we know.

The fertilizer crisis is a “headwind.” The surge in food prices is “sticky inflation.” The emerging protests are “security risks” in “fragile states.” You can feel the conceptual lag. Our words belong to a world where the biosphere was a stable backdrop and politics was something that happened between human beings over the division of an expanding pie.

We do not have a mainstream language for what it means when the pie itself is shrinking, the oven is glitching, and the people in charge keep dismantling the support structures of the modern world without a thought for the consequences.

So we talk about basis points. We talk about quarterly growth downgrades. We talk about the need to “avoid panic.”

We do not talk about the fact that we are discovering, live, how little slack there is between a 20 percent jump in fertilizer prices and a non‑trivial chance of regime collapse in some unlucky capital, and all the blowback that follows.


Living Through the Long Emergency

The fantasy of collapse is that it appears all at once, in a way that no one can argue with. The grid goes down, the shelves empty, the state evaporates, and even the most committed centrist is forced to admit that something has ended.

The reality, as always, is more tedious and more cruel.

Collapse looks like a succession of “bad years” that never quite resolve into a recovered normal. It looks like a food‑price index that ratchets up in spikes and plateaus instead of returning to baseline. It looks like an expanding ring of countries where politics is permanently in crisis mode: new cabinets every few months, emergency laws, rolling protests, quiet exoduses of anyone with the means to leave.

From the center of the empire, this reads as background noise. There is always somewhere on fire. The headlines cycle through: Lebanon, Sudan, Haiti, Tunisia, Sri Lanka. Each story arrives as if it were self‑contained: “corruption,” “populism,” “sectarianism.” Occasionally someone mentions climate or food prices as context. Then it’s on to the next thing.

From the edges, it reads differently. It reads as a converging stack: worsening heat, erratic rains, more expensive inputs, heavier debt burdens, harsher conditionality, more cynical elites, less competent states. It feels, to anyone paying attention, less like a string of coincidences and more like a coordinated withdrawal of whatever flimsy guarantees the modern system used to offer.

The 2026 fertilizer crisis is not the cause of that pattern. It is an accelerant poured onto it.

And because it is tied directly to an ongoing war in a region that elites actually care about, it also serves another function: it briefly illuminates the plumbing. For once, you can see the line from strike package to shipping lane to ammonia plant to price chart to hunger statistic to protest. You can see how thin the membrane is between a decision in a situation room and the composition of a meal in a slum.

In a sane civilization, this would be a moment of reckoning. We would recognize that, having blown past our planetary boundaries, we no longer have the slack to treat food, fertilizer, and energy as pieces on a game board. We would retire the idea that wars over “credibility” or “deterrence” are a legitimate luxury, and that oil, the rope we used to hang ourselves, is not worth killing and dying for. We would start budgeting not just for basis‑point wobbles but for the possibility that multiple peripheral states tip into unmanageable crisis at once.

Instead, we will probably do what we always do.

We will muddle through this particular shock. Some sort of deal will eventually be struck over Iran, or at least the incentives of the various players will align long enough to take the boot off Hormuz’s neck. Fertilizer flows will resume, at higher prices and under more politicized conditions. Farmers will adjust. Some governments will fall; others will stagger on. Analysts will declare that we “avoided the worst.”

Then, a few years from now, we will stack another crisis on top of this one: another war, another drought, another “unprecedented” heatwave, another debt meltdown. The planetary boundaries diagram will get another grim update. The phrase “tipping point” will appear in more headlines, wearing the thin smile of a label that has outlived its usefulness.

Somewhere in this rolling present, a child will stand in a bread line or skip a meal or drop out of school to help subsidize the household fertilizer bill. They will not know that they are living inside a concept called “overshoot.” They will not have strong opinions about the relative importance of 1.5 versus 2 degrees, or about whether the Amazon is still technically a rainforest or has quietly started transforming into a savannah.

They will know only that things keep getting a little harder, a little tighter, a little less predictable.

We are fond of asking when collapse will come, as if we were waiting for a date. The more honest question, looking at the war‑driven fertilizer shock folded into an already busted planetary budget, is how much of it we have already decided to normalize.

Because from where they stand, at the very end of the supply chains and the fraying planetary boundaries and the dire IMF reports, it does not feel like a “risk scenario.” It feels like the only world they have ever been permitted to know.

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The Wars We Let Begin

25 Wednesday Mar 2026

Posted by xraymike79 in Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Mental Health

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Antiwar Poetry, Choke Point Politics, Civilian Suffering, Dehumanization Of Enemies, Democratic Hypocrisy, Empire in Decline, Energy Geopolitics, Ethical Reckoning, Human Cost Of War, Imperial Critique, Media Propaganda, Middle East Wars, Militarism Exposed, Moral Injury, Neocolonial Violence, Petroimperialism, Rhetoric And Reality, State Violence, War Profiteering

In gilded towers, men in ties
Debated body counts over bread.
They waved off intel, polished up the lies,
And blessed the bombs that made the nameless dead.

They lit the sky and called the burning good,
Gave Fury a name, proclaimed Epic their fire.
The generals clinked their crystal where they stood
While in ancient lands, the pyres climbed higher.

The pundits spoke of surgical precision,
Of targets neutralized with sterile care,
While mothers learned the dark definition
Of “collateral”—the children playing there.

A mother in Tehran braids her daughter’s hair,
Hums softly, knows nothing of what they’ve spun,
The “axis of evil,” the headlines that blare—
She only knows the sirens have begun.

Behold the math of democratic war:
We bomb them into freedom, death by death.
The senators applaud and vote for more
While a child in Rafah draws their final breath.

An infant’s shoe beside a shattered gate,
A doctor weeping in a corridor,
Become statistics in the logs of state,
Acceptable to those who keep the score.

They say the Persians harbored wicked schemes,
That preemption is the wisest form of peace,
That rubble is the architecture of dreams
And death, correctly managed, brings release.

But pull the curtain back—behold the crude,
The black blood pulsing through the Hormuz Strait.
For oil we dress the slaughter up as shrewd,
For tanker lanes we fabricate the hate.

They’ll tell us it was “necessary,” “just,”
That history will vindicate the choice.
But history is written in the dust
Of every throat that never found its voice.

And when the last drone footage fades to black,
When talking heads debate what went awry,
The dead won’t care who signed off on the attack,
Nor parse the manufactured reasons why.

So raise the flag and sound the triumph’s horn,
Let history record another win.
The foolish and the wise alike will mourn
The wars we end by letting them begin.

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The Greatest Grift: How a Dying Empire Turns War into a Volatility Trade

24 Tuesday Mar 2026

Posted by xraymike79 in Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Mental Health

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Casino Capitalism And Legitimacy, Climate And Energy Overshoot, Desalination And Grid Dependency, Financialization Of Warfare, Geopolitics And Energy Systems, Iran War Energy Shock, Late Imperial Finance Capitalism, Late Stage American Empire, Market Manipulation Allegations, Militarized Fossil Economy, Neoliberal Crisis Of Institutions, Prediction Markets And Politics, Strait Of Hormuz Chokepoint, Trump Era War Rhetoric, Volatility Presidency Analysis, War As Financial Derivative

The War that Became a Ticker

Generals in the Iranian army refer to this war as a battle against the Great Satan and the little satan. Perhaps they are right — just not in the way they think. The satanic part is not only the missiles that arc over cities or the sanctions that grind away at ordinary lives. It is the way the world’s most powerful government has turned war itself into a tradable instrument, something to be jawboned up and down so the right people can skim the volatility.

By the time the president of the United States started talking about ‘obliterating’ Iran’s power plants and ‘closing the book’ on its grid, the damage that really matters to markets was already done. The undersea cable routes and surface chokepoints around Hormuz had become active war zones, export terminals were cratered, and tankers were diverted or left to idle in legal and insurance limbo. The Strait of Hormuz — that narrow channel that once carried roughly a fifth of the world’s oil — now behaves like a half‑blocked artery: a thin trickle of traffic, a permanently swollen risk premium, and Gulf energy infrastructure written off on timelines measured in years, not news cycles. In that setting, every new threat from the podium is less a discrete military choice than another stress test on a civilisation whose energy system already runs over the redline.

This is a war being fought on top of an overdrawn energy and climate system: grids run closer to their limits, desalination and air‑conditioning are the only things keeping some cities barely habitable, and food systems stagger under high input costs and bad weather. The strikes on gas hubs, refineries and export terminals across the Gulf have already pushed energy agencies to warn that the current disruption surpasses the oil shocks of the 1970s and the recent Russia–Europe gas crisis in severity. By the IEA’s count, more than 40 major energy facilities across nine Middle Eastern countries have already been “severely or very severely” damaged, in what its director calls the most significant disruption in the history of global oil, with world LNG exports down roughly one‑fifth since the war began. The ladder of escalation is no longer just about prestige or territory; it is about whether the industrial metabolism that still feeds and shelters billions can keep its remaining arteries open.

Most of the commentary still pretends this is a familiar story. We are told that airstrikes are “limited,” that ultimatums can be walked back, that some mix of pressure and prudence will restore a tolerable equilibrium. But look at how the decisions are actually being made and sold, and a different logic appears: not the sober calculus of a threatened republic, but the jumpy, short‑term reflexes of a regime that sees every new crisis first as a set of lines on a screen. The same men deciding what gets bombed and when are also watching oil futures, stock indices and prediction markets as anxiously as any day trader — and, increasingly, talking about the war in ways that look designed to move those lines.


The Volatility Presidency

This is not entirely new. For years, Donald Trump has treated the stock market as his personal scoreboard, boasting when indices rose and raging when they fell. But in this phase of the Iran war, that instinct has fused with something more dangerous: an awareness that a single presidential post can send oil and equities lurching in opposite directions, and that the story told about war — “on the brink” or “productive talks” — is itself a lever on trillions of dollars in paper value.​

The pattern around his supposed Iran talks makes the point. Over one weekend, he careened from doubling down on war — threatening Iran’s power plants and setting ultimatums over the Strait of Hormuz — to suddenly suggesting that the U.S. was “considering winding down” operations and had engaged in “productive conversations” with Tehran. Iranian officials have flatly denied that any such substantive talks are happening, calling his claims “fake news” deployed “to manipulate the financial and oil markets to escape the quagmire” in which Washington and Tel Aviv now find themselves. Iran specialists who actually speak to people in the country say the same thing in more careful language: whatever contacts exist are superficial, nowhere near the hard bargaining and concessions that a real ceasefire would require.

The timing around one particular morning is hard to ignore. At 6:49 a.m. in New York, on an otherwise quiet Monday with no major economic releases or central bank speeches scheduled, roughly 6,200 Brent and WTI futures contracts changed hands in a single minute. The notional value of those trades was about $580 million. Veteran traders describe the move as “really abnormal” for that time and context — an unusually aggressive sale into a market with no obvious catalyst. Just a quarter of an hour later, the president posted on social media that there had been “productive conversations” with Iran and that strikes on its power infrastructure were being postponed. Oil prices quickly fell, futures on the S&P 500 jumped, and financial outlets framed the whole move as a “relief rally” driven by hopes of de‑escalation. As one journalist close to Iranian officials put it, “Somebody made an enormous amount of money this morning on that.”

Seen from the Situation Room, the temptation must be obvious. With one set of words you can raise oil, sink equities and tighten the screws on an adversary. With another set — “very good talks,” “Iran wants a deal,” “we’re winding down” — you can reverse the move and bathe domestic markets in a momentary sense of relief. The risk to American troops, to Iranian civilians, to everyone downstream of higher prices and disrupted flows does not show up on the trading screens. The profit and loss on those half‑hidden trades does.​


War as Side Bet

On the tape, that 6:49 a.m. episode looks less like coincidence and more like choreography. In a dead patch of the calendar, thousands of oil contracts hit a thin market in one concentrated burst, driving prices down. Minutes later, the president appears, announces “productive conversations” with Iran and a pause in strikes on its grid, and the same screens flash green as equities rebound on cue. What gets sold to the public as a passing mood swing — “relief” on hopes of de‑escalation — is a reminder that a single, well‑timed message can turn war risk into a tradable pattern.

No single chart can prove that the same hand moved both the contracts and the president’s carefully calibrated words. Officials insist that any suggestion of insider profiteering is “baseless and irresponsible” without hard evidence. But traders interviewed about the sequence say this is only one in a series of “well‑timed trades” they have seen cluster just ahead of war‑related announcements in recent months, and the same pattern now shows up in the new prediction markets: freshly opened, anonymous wallets quietly stacking ceasefire bets just before key strikes and presidential posts, then sitting otherwise dormant. To the people who watch those flows for a living, war is becoming less a tragic last resort and more a source of tradable volatility — a sequence of sharp moves, in futures and in side‑bets, that can be front‑run, amplified and harvested.

And this is just the visible tip of a much larger wager. Ten newly opened Polymarket accounts have now wagered around $160,000 in total on a U.S.–Iran ceasefire by late March and mid‑April, positions that were up more than $300,000 in paper gains within a day of Trump’s “productive talks” post, on top of an earlier account that won over $85,000 correctly timing the first U.S. strikes. The platform’s own statistics show over $20 million riding on the ceasefire contract alone.​

That prediction market is not a neutral spectator. It has been marketed as a kind of “News 2.0,” a way to turn every twist in war and politics into a price signal. One of its investors is a venture capital firm owned by the president’s son. Its “US x Iran ceasefire by March 31” contract saw its implied probability jump from 6 percent to 24 percent over a few days, with more than $21 million wagered on the outcome. On Discord channels devoted to trading the platform, users and bots swap tips on how to arbitrage between markets, which whales to follow, and how to “monetize” the war — including one suggestion to bet “YES” on the ceasefire contract simply because three historically profitable accounts had done so. War is not just something that moves markets anymore. War is a market, complete with side bets, house rake and VIP rooms.​

Meanwhile, the people whose lives are on the line are told this is all about deterrence and national honor, even as Tehran denies any serious talks and Iran specialists describe what diplomacy there is as shallow and performative. In this version of statecraft, talk of ceasefires doubles as a tool of market management, a way to keep investors docile while a handful of well-connected traders profit around war headlines. To the families under the bombs, it is something worse than a lie: it turns their terror into a business, reducing burned cities and maimed children to a source of premium volatility that can be bundled into trades and quietly monetized.

In older wars, the grift was at least delayed. First you sent the troops, then you handed out the no‑bid contracts and reconstruction scams. In this one, the grift is built into the opening bell. A presidential threat to obliterate power plants lifts oil and sinks equities. A sudden morning discovery of “productive conversations” reverses the move. Cryptic wallets on a prediction market with first‑family money behind it load up on ceasefire contracts before the pivot. A half‑billion dollars in oil changes hands in the narrow window just before the post that moves the curve. Hundreds of thousands of uniformed Americans and millions of civilians are the background actors in this trade, the human volatility that makes the line chart interesting.

From a distance, it looks abstract: candlesticks, percentages, green and red numbers. Up close, it is something darker. It is a system in which the same small circle of men can threaten to bomb a country’s grid on Sunday, hint at peace on Monday, and leave the risk — the chance of miscalculation, retaliation, terror attacks, escalation — smeared across everyone else’s lives, while the upside from correctly timing the whipsaw lines the pockets of billionaires. The Great Satan, in that sense, is not some metaphysical evil. It is a set of incentives. It is a machine that teaches powerful people that lying about war to move a market is not an unthinkable sin, but just another trade.


Overshoot and Institutional Decay

None of this is happening on a blank slate. The war‑as‑ticker show is unfolding in a world where permanent crisis has already become the background condition: blackouts, failed harvests and water stress are no longer ‘tail risks’ but recurring features of the landscape. In that setting, the Gulf is not just another theatre of conflict; it is a pressure point in a system that now depends on ever more fragile pipes, cables and desalination plants to keep hundreds of millions of people alive. An attack on a gas hub or export terminal is not simply a hit to ‘energy markets’, but a disruption to the plumbing that underpins food, cooling and political stability far beyond the blast radius. What the Iran war exposes is how little slack remains: leaderships that think in broadcast cycles, markets that treat chronic shortage as another opportunity for a bigger payoff, and institutions so hollowed out that open allegations of fake ceasefire talk for market gain barely register as grounds for investigation. When war headlines pass through that kind of system, they don’t just move prices; they test whether there is anything left that won’t be exploited.

This is what overshoot looks like on the political plane. As the material slack disappears — as cheap energy, stable weather, and fiscal room for error all erode — the people at the top respond not with restraint, but with greater concentration of risk and reward. Sanctions and strikes are dialed up, not down. War threats are fed into a media‑finance machine that converts them into tradable bumps. Crypto prediction markets with direct links to the ruling family turn ceasefires and missile barrages into side bets, while there is effectively no one regulating it. The same culture that overdrew the planet’s energy and carbon budget is now overdrawing its last institutional brakes, cashing out any remaining credibility, restraint and basic truth‑telling in the same way it once cashed out forests and oilfields.​

In that sense, the market manipulation you see around this war is not an aberration. It is the late‑stage form of the same logic that drove us into climate and energy overshoot in the first place: maximise extraction now, socialise the risk later. The infrastructure war in the Gulf ratchets the physical system closer to failure — less spare capacity, higher prices, more fragile food and water chains. The grift ratchets the political system closer to outright kleptocracy — broken trust, eviscerated norms, and a growing acceptance that even matters of war and peace are just inputs to somebody’s trading strategy. Together they push the whole structure toward a mode of permanent triage and crisis, where genuine de‑escalation becomes harder to imagine than one more well‑timed post.


Who Pays for the Trade

For the people whose lives sit under these charts, none of this is abstract. A Marine on a carrier group in the Gulf does not experience “productive conversations” as a clever way to take a dollar off the oil price; he experiences it as whiplash in his risk envelope, a sudden widening or narrowing of the odds that the next 48 hours will involve incoming fire. An Iranian nurse trying to keep a ward running under rolling blackouts does not experience a half‑billion‑dollar futures dump as “liquidity”; she experiences it as another day wondering whether the life-saving lights and pumps will stay on. Families in Cairo or Karachi or Lagos do not experience a prediction‑market rally on “ceasefire by March 31” as clever information aggregation; they experience it, weeks later, as the rising price of bread and cooking gas.

What is being traded away in these moments is not just money, but the last residue of legitimacy. A state that lets war double as a casino table is not merely failing in prudence; it is announcing that its soldiers, its citizens, and millions of people far outside its borders are acceptable collateral for a game whose real stakes are measured in basis points. When the same ecosystem that staffs the situation rooms is also seeding and profiting from platforms that invite anonymous insiders to bet on ceasefires and airstrikes, the message is clear: there is no line between life-and-death policy and financial speculation anymore.​​

From Tehran’s vantage point, calling this a struggle against the Great Satan and the little satan is a way of giving shape to that betrayal. The truth is more prosaic and, in some ways, more damning. The “satanic” quality of this moment is not supernatural malice; it is a mundane, spreadsheet rationality that can look at a map full of power plants, desalination complexes and export terminals, look at a trading screen full of oil futures and war bets, and see them both as pieces in the same end‑stage game. A civilisation that will burn its own future climate for one more quarter of growth will also, in its final phase, gamble with its own wars for one more rally.

You can halt a strike. You can stage a handshake. You can talk oil down a few dollars with a story about ‘productive conversations.’ But once a system has learned that bombing grids and inventing talks are just different ways of moving markets on Wall Street, something deeper has rotted. In that world, every new crisis is not only a danger but a profit center, and the people with the least say in the matter are drafted as collateral so that, somewhere, someone who already has more than enough can congratulate themselves on making the right call at 6:49 a.m.

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The War That Sinks The Lifeboats

22 Sunday Mar 2026

Posted by xraymike79 in Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Mental Health

≈ 5 Comments

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Climate And Conflict, Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Corruption And War Making, Critical Infrastructure Targeting, Desalination Vulnerability, Energy Infrastructure War, Fossil Fuel Overshoot, Geopolitical Escalation, Gulf Energy Crisis, Iran US Israel War, Late Fossil World, Limits To Growth, Managed Chaos Doctrine, Nuclear Deterrence Erosion, Stagflation And Rationing, Strait Of Hormuz, War And Climate Tipping Points, Water Energy Nexus

The next phase of this war is not mysterious. It is written into the geography of the Gulf, the logic of deterrence‑by‑mutilation, and the psychology of the people now pressing buttons. We are standing one rung below a war not just in an energy region, but on the energy infrastructure that keeps the late fossil world staggering forward.

This is not a thought experiment about some future conflict. The opening moves have already been played.

From Runways to Lifelines

When the first US and Israeli strikes hit Iranian territory, they were carefully framed as discrete and containable. Runways. Radar domes. Missile depots. Natanz. The outer edges of Bushehr. In reply, Iran’s missiles and drones went looking for the usual military objects and something more: gas hubs, export terminals, refineries, LNG trains. The real message was written not in communiqués but in target sets. War planners on all sides know perfectly well what that means.

The Strait of Hormuz is technically still there on the map, but as an artery for global energy flows it has been cut and cauterised. Tankers idle or divert. Iraq’s exports have withered to a barely functioning trickle. Qatar’s showpiece gas complex is damaged in ways measured in years, not weeks. Insurance markets and shipping companies, those quiet actuaries of acceptable risk, have already priced in the fact that the Gulf is no longer a boring industrial park. It is a live‑fire range.

And yet we are told that all of this is still a “limited” phase. The president speaks of “winding down” within a news cycle or two. Israel declares that it has “reset deterrence.” Analysts who should know better write as if this is a bad quarter that will be smoothed away by the next central bank decision. The words and the physical reality have parted company.

If this is limited, what does unlimited look like?

It looks like the logic of the past weeks allowed to run forward without a last‑minute swerve: not just occasional probes on energy infrastructure, but a deliberate, sustained campaign to treat the power plants, export terminals, LNG trains, refineries, pipelines, and desalination complexes of an entire region as legitimate targets. It looks like leaders who already see those facilities as bargaining chips deciding that the time has come to cash them in.

Ultimatums at the Edge

The ultimatum has already been spoken aloud: open the Strait of Hormuz “fully, without threat,” or watch your power plants be “obliterated, starting with the biggest one first.” That is not a line from some lunatic fringe. It is the public stance of the man who commands the largest military arsenal on Earth, first blasted out in a social‑media ultimatum and then repeated on camera, echoed by his entourage, parsed by markets.

On the other side of the exchange, Iranian commanders have been equally clear. Any attack on Iran’s fuel and energy infrastructure will, they say, bring strikes on “all energy and desalination infrastructure” that keeps the American alliance system in the region alive. Ports, pipelines, refineries, LNG terminals, desal plants: all of it fair game. They are not talking about symbolic hits on an empty storage tank. They are talking about trying to turn the Gulf’s industrial coastline from a pump and filter for the world economy into a forest of wrecked steel.

These are not abstract threats. Each side has already shown it can do what it is now promising to do on a larger scale.

The United States and Israel have hit the nerve centres of Iran’s nuclear and military complex. Iran has already used missiles and drones to knock out a large slice of Saudi output in a single strike set; in this war it has hit gas hubs and export terminals across the Gulf hard enough that some capacities will not return for years. The Strait of Hormuz has been functionally closed once. It can be closed again, and worse.

The hardware is there. The doctrines are there. The ladders to climb are clearly marked.

What stands between this moment and a full‑blown energy infrastructure war is not capability. It is judgement. And judgement, right now, is in short supply.

A President at War with Constraints

Collapse is not just about physical limits. It is about the quality of decisions taken as systems strain. In that light, the most unnerving part of the current crisis is not the missiles themselves. It is the personality, and a ring of sycophants, making choices in Washington.

The record of this presidency, and of this war, shows a man who cannot hold a stable goal in his head for more than a few days. Regime change becomes “better deals,” which becomes “teaching them a lesson,” which becomes “re‑establishing deterrence,” which becomes “I’m not putting troops anywhere, but if I were, I certainly wouldn’t tell you.” The words keep moving. The hardware keeps flowing forward.

When airbases and radars did not break Iran’s will, the answer was to hit energy exports. When energy exports did not produce capitulation, the answer was Natanz. When Natanz and projectiles near Bushehr did not end the war on schedule, the answer became power plants and ultimatums over Hormuz. The escalatory staircase is being climbed not because anyone has a clear picture of the landing above, but because the man in charge cannot tolerate what he perceives as defiance.

Ordinarily, systems compensate for that kind of leader with strong internal brakes: intelligence estimates, legal reviews, bureaucratic inertia, congressional pushback. Those brakes are badly worn. Inspectors and analysts who insist on presenting worst‑case scenarios are frozen out. Loyalists and ideologues are promoted. The circle of people who can look the president in the eye and say “this will blow back on us for decades” has shrunk to almost nothing.

Overlay on top of that the straightforward corruption of this administration. This is not just a government that lies. It is a government that treats public office as an extraction machine, a way for friends and donors and family to convert political access into contracts, bailouts, and speculative wins. In that kind of court, a deep, prolonged energy and shipping crisis is not just a danger. It is also an opportunity. It is a chance for arms manufacturers, private security firms, and consultancies to sell new cycles of hardware and “resilience.” It is a chance for financial players to bet on volatility, on distressed assets, on the rerouting of trade. It is a chance for political operatives to rally a base around siege narratives and enemies at the gates.

When the people closest to power believe they will either be insulated from the worst or even enriched by the turmoil, the calculation of what counts as an “acceptable risk” becomes grotesquely skewed. A scenario that would horrify a minimally sane elite starts to look, from within the palace, like just another throw of the dice.

This is not how you want the world’s largest military power to evaluate the idea of bombing another state’s power grid.

Israel’s Appetite for Ruins

If Washington supplies impulsivity and corruption, Israel supplies a security doctrine that is almost tailor‑made to prefer ruin over restraint in its neighbourhood.

For years now, the country’s leadership has operated on an unspoken principle: it is better to live next to fragments, failed states, and open‑air prisons than to live next to coherent rivals. You see it in the “mowing the grass” logic of repeated assaults on Gaza with no real post‑war governance plan. You see it in the long campaign of airstrikes in Syria and Lebanon designed not just to interdict particular weapons, but to keep any rival force in a constant state of weakness and distraction. You see it in the casual talk of “no one to negotiate with” after doing everything possible to ensure that is the case.

This is managed chaos as doctrine. Instability is not an unfortunate side‑effect of protecting security. It is part of the security strategy itself.

It is also, inevitably, a form of hubris. It assumes that the fires you set will always blow away from your own house. It assumes that your technological edge, your alliance with the United States, your Iron Dome and your offshore gas, will always be enough to ride out the shockwaves bouncing around the region.

Bring that doctrine into the Iran war, and its implications for energy infrastructure are stark. From this vantage point, a regional landscape of half‑crippled energy exporters – Iran bleeding, Iraq destabilised, Gulf monarchies strained by their own water and power crises – is not an unthinkable nightmare. It is one possible route to a future in which no single state can dominate the region without Israeli consent.

In that frame, deeper strikes on Iranian energy and power are not ruled out because they might trigger a regional energy war. They are invited as a way to test whether the old hubris still holds: whether Israel and its patron can ride out the storm while everyone else drowns.

There are, of course, Israeli analysts who understand the risks, who speak in public and private about the dangers of “no day after” thinking. But they are not the ones driving policy. Policy is being made by men who have just turned much of Gaza into an uninhabitable ruin and called it security. That mindset does not stop easily at the shoreline of the Gulf.

Iran’s Shadow Over the Grid

The last piece is the state that is supposed to be deterred by all this: Iran.

If Tehran’s leaders were bluffing, if their threats to hit “all energy and desalination infrastructure” were mere theatre, the game would look different. But they have spent the past decade proving that they are not bluffing. They have already shown that they can use drones and missiles to temporarily knock out a large share of Saudi output in a single, carefully planned strike. They have shown that they can hit gas hubs, refineries, and terminals across the Gulf with enough precision and persistence to take capacities offline for years. They have shown that they can threaten shipping lanes without needing to sink a single supertanker on camera: a few well‑placed hits, a few mines, and insurers and captains do the rest.

They have also adjusted their doctrine. Closing Hormuz outright is no longer the only card. The new card is to treat the entire coastal industrial strip of the Gulf – the refineries, power plants, gas separators, desalination facilities, export jetties – as a single, extended target. If Iran’s own grid and plants are hit, the promise is that entire segments of that strip will be lit up and shut down in reply.

From their perspective, this is not irrational brinkmanship. It is the only way to make the United States and its partners feel their own vulnerability. A state that has watched sanctions and covert attacks grind away at its economy for years, and that has just seen its nuclear sites, power stations, and even a crowded girls’ school pulled into the target set, is unlikely to be persuaded by one more demonstration of American and Israeli firepower. It is far more likely to double down on the only leverage it has left.

A campaign of that sort does not need to be total to be effective. It only needs to keep a large enough share of export capacity and shipping offline that prices and shortages remain structurally high. It only needs to hit enough desalination plants and grids that Gulf cities periodically teeter on the edge of unlivability. It only needs to demonstrate, over and over, that the American and Israeli promise of “controlled” war is a lie.

Given the hardware already in play and the political psychology in Tehran, it would be foolish to dismiss that campaign as empty rhetoric. The only real question is what scale of American and Israeli attack would flip the switch from calibrated strikes to full‑tilt retaliation.

Shock on Top of Overshoot

All of this is playing out not in a vacuum, but in a system that has already overshot its safe operating space.

The climate system is edging into a tipping‑point regime where coral reefs, ice sheets, permafrost, and major weather patterns are starting to shift in ways that cannot be reversed. Heatwaves and droughts arrive stacked on top of each other, collapsing harvests and grids in the same season. Desalination and air‑conditioning are no longer luxuries in many parts of the Middle East; they are the bare minimum required to keep cities habitable for more than a few hours at a time.

The global economy, meanwhile, looks increasingly like the mid‑century overshoot curves drawn in forgotten system dynamics labs. Growth depends on ever‑rising material and energy throughputs. Damage from past growth – in the atmosphere, in aquifers, in eroded soils – raises the cost of maintaining the very systems that keep growth going. Debt and financialisation multiply claims on a future that is physically shrinking.

Into that context, drop a prolonged, mutual targeting of energy infrastructure across the Gulf.

The direct effects are obvious: a large slice of oil and gas exports knocked out for years; prices spiking and remaining unstable; countries scrambling for alternate suppliers and routes that do not exist at scale. Less obvious, but just as important, are the second‑ and third‑order consequences. Food systems buckle as fertiliser, diesel, and shipping all become more expensive and less reliable. Poor importers pay twice: once at the port and once in the bond market. States that were already barely able to afford basic services now face soaring energy and debt bills at the same time. Structural adjustment, privatisations, and austerity come back with a vengeance, this time in a world of angry, online, climate‑stressed populations. Investment that could have gone into adaptation, decarbonisation, or simply keeping people fed is diverted into emergency fuel subsidies, military spending, and the expensive, never‑ending task of hardening infrastructure for the next shock.

A full‑blown energy infrastructure war in the Gulf would not be “the” cause of global collapse. But it would act as a powerful ratchet: pushing an already strained system further into a pattern of contraction, triage, and permanent crisis.

The comforting story that we will “take a hit and then bounce back” becomes less believable each time one of these ratchets clicks. At some point, even the most stubborn optimist has to admit that the staircase is heading down.

Punctuated Descent

There is an old argument in the collapse world about tempo. Will the fall be fast or slow? Will there be a single, dramatic break, or a long succession of smaller slips?

The more this war grinds on, the more that distinction starts to feel academic. What we are living through looks like a punctuated descent: a long, grinding erosion of the foundations punctuated by sharp blows that permanently reduce what can be rebuilt afterward.

The first phase of Epic Fury – the war on cables and chokepoints in the energy system – was one such blow. The looming threat of a second phase – the war on power plants, terminals, and desalination – is another. Each blow cuts more slack out of the system. Each recovery comes back thinner, more brittle, more exclusive.

Seen from a distance, that might look like a slow decline. Seen up close, in the places where the missiles land and the taps run dry, it registers as something very different.

The odds of that second blow, that full‑scale energy infrastructure war, are higher than they ought to be because the people making decisions have every incentive to roll the dice and few effective constraints stopping them. A corrupt administration in Washington that sees crisis as business opportunity. A government in Tel Aviv that has taught itself to think of permanent regional chaos as a security strategy. A leadership in Tehran that has concluded, not unreasonably, that only visible mutual vulnerability offers any hope of survival.

In a saner world, the obvious next rung on the ladder would be the one everyone agrees not to touch. In this one, you can almost feel the weight shifting onto it.

You can halt a strike. You can sign a ceasefire. You can send the tankers back through a half‑cleared strait and tell yourself that “normality” has returned. What you cannot do is call back what you have taught is acceptable to the system. Once power plants, desalination complexes, and export terminals have been used as bargaining chips in one war, they are on the table for the next.

That is what it means to fight inside an already ongoing collapse: each round of brinkmanship redraws the map of what everyone else will someday be willing to risk.

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RSS A Closer Look

  • 7 RULES on Approaching Authoritarian Supporters
  • Trump supporters report higher levels of psychopathy, manipulativeness, callousness, and narcissism
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RSS A Prosperous Way Down

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RSS Adam Curtis Blog

  • SAVE YOUR KISSES FOR ME
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RSS Adam Vs The Man

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RSS Aljazeera

  • UK artist defends ‘Drawings Against Genocide’ after show cancelled
  • Gaza aid convoy in Libya prepares to head to Gaza
  • Iran war live: Lebanon, Israel extend truce; Tehran ready for more US talks
  • Activists hang Palestinian flag on the Eiffel Tower for Nakba Day
  • Mahmoud Khalil calls for deportation to be halted in light of new evidence
  • What are World Cup 2026 national team base camps and their locations?
  • Seven killed in Gaza on Nakba Day as Israel says it targets Hamas member
  • What did Trump and Xi discuss during the China summit?
  • Cuba hit by protests, blackouts amid oil shortage
  • Ex-Sinaloa security chief in Mexico arrested in US over alleged cartel ties

RSS Aljazeera – Opinion

  • UK artist defends ‘Drawings Against Genocide’ after show cancelled
  • Gaza aid convoy in Libya prepares to head to Gaza
  • Iran war live: Lebanon, Israel extend truce; Tehran ready for more US talks
  • Activists hang Palestinian flag on the Eiffel Tower for Nakba Day
  • Mahmoud Khalil calls for deportation to be halted in light of new evidence
  • What are World Cup 2026 national team base camps and their locations?
  • Seven killed in Gaza on Nakba Day as Israel says it targets Hamas member
  • What did Trump and Xi discuss during the China summit?
  • Cuba hit by protests, blackouts amid oil shortage
  • Ex-Sinaloa security chief in Mexico arrested in US over alleged cartel ties

RSS All Tied Up and Nowhere to Go

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RSS Alternative Radio

  • [Vali Nasr] The U.S. War on Iran: Origins & Consequences

RSS AlterNet

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RSS Anarchist News

  • ANews Podcast 466 – 5.8.26
  • Update on May Day 2026 Anarchist Prisoners (Indonesia)
  • What would an Anarchist federation society look like?
  • "I am no longer an anarchist." Mikalai Dziadok on prison, God, & disillusionment with ideologies
  • B(A)D News Episode 101 (04/2026)
  • Trial against Anarchist comrade in Leipzig in 12.05
  • Update about Miguel Peralta’s case in Mexico
  • Open Letter from Komar (Surabaya, Indonesia)
  • Anarchism Beyond The Binary
  • “Counterterrorism” Now Officially Means Targeting Trans People

RSS Antony Loewenstein

  • The fearful growth of techno-fascism
  • The Antony Loewenstein Podcast: About Australia’s Antisemitism Royal Commission
  • TRT World interview on US/Iran/Israeli tensions
  • Does Israel risk being economically isolated?
  • SBS Arabic interview on the Palestine laboratory and Middle East truth-telling
  • The desperate need for more critical Jewish voices at the Royal Commission looking into anti-Semitism
  • Francesca Albanese and the politics of war accountability
  • The Antony Loewenstein Podcast: The One Nation Series: Media Made Pauline Hanson Bigger Than Her Votes
  • The power to stop Palantir
  • The Briefing podcast on the Royal Commission, anti-Semitism and Palestine

RSS Apocadocs

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RSS Arctic Emergency Institute

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RSS Arctic Methane Emergency Group (AMEG)

  • AMEG Strategic Plan
  • Breaking the Chain
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  • The biggest story of all time
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  • Storm exacerbates Arctic predicament
  • Food security threatened by sea ice loss
  • Supplementary evidence to the EAC from John Nissen on behalf of AMEG
  • Message from the Arctic Methane Emergency Group

RSS Arctic News

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RSS Arctic Sea Ice

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RSS Arctic Sea Ice News & Analysis

  • Sea Ice Today services reduced
  • Antarctic sea ice maximum settles in third place
  • 2025 Arctic sea ice minimum squeezes into the ten lowest minimums
  • Taking a bite out of the Beaufort
  • The peak of summer, the depths of winter
  • SSMIS sunsets AMSR2 rises
  • May sea ice…always grace our planet’s poles
  • April falls flat
  • Spring is in the air
  • Arctic sea ice sets a record low maximum in 2025

RSS Around the Coast Mountains

  • The name’s Mark… Mark BC
  • Packrafting / Fatbiking Buntzen Lake
  • My New Surly Pugsley Fatbike Build
  • Salsipuedes Canyon by Fatbike
  • Bridge River Recon Part 3 — Chilcotin Mountains Park
  • Bridge River Recon Part 2
  • Bridge River Recon, Part 1
  • Chilcotin Bikerafting Route
  • May 25 to 28 — Long Beach, California to Alfonsinas, Mexico
  • Ring Pass, Attempt #2

RSS Arthur Silber

  • Moving Interruptus, and Why Hospitals Suck
  • Crisis
  • How Many Damn Fucking Times Do I Have to Explain This?
  • So Close, Yet So Far
  • Very Sick, Very Scared
  • Help! Please
  • Mama's Last Hug
  • Twilight Zone America
  • Concerning Moral Judgment, and Moral Monsters
  • SERIOUS TROUBLE: Pain. Hospital. ???

RSS Arundhati Roy

  • Arundhati Roy on her fugitive childhood: ‘My knees were full of scars and cuts – a sign of my wild, imperfect, fatherless life’
  • Modi’s model is at last revealed for what it is: violent Hindu nationalism underwritten by big business | Arundhati Roy
  • This is no ordinary spying. Our most intimate selves are now exposed | Arundhati Roy
  • ‘We are witnessing a crime against humanity’: Arundhati Roy on India’s Covid catastrophe – podcast
  • Arundhati Roy on India’s Covid catastrophe: ‘We are witnessing a crime against humanity’
  • Modi's brutal treatment of Kashmir exposes his tactics – and their flaws | Arundhati Roy
  • Arundhati Roy extract: 'The backlash came in police cases, court appearances and even jail'
  • Literature provides shelter. That's why we need it | Arundhati Roy
  • Amid arrests and killings, Bangladesh and India must fight censorship | Arundhati Roy
  • An exclusive extract from Arundhati Roy’s The Ministry Of Utmost Happiness

RSS Arundhati Roy Says

  • A perfect day for democracy
  • Arundhati Roy speaks about the issue of rape in India
  • We Call This Progress
  • ‘Those Who’ve Tried To Change The System Via Elections Have Ended Up Being Changed By It'
  • Roy Against the Machine
  • If we do not love people, what are we fighting for?
  • All roads lead to Sharjah book fair
  • ‘Fairy princess’ to ‘instinctive critic’
  • Arundhati Roy shuns 'activist' tag
  • State attacking tribals in name of Green Hunt: Roy

RSS ASPO – USA

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RSS Avedon’s Sideshow

  • It's time we started rockin' the boat
  • Not just anybody
  • Well you know it's a shame and a pity
  • It was a time when strangers were welcome here
  • We will protect our home
  • All you gotta do is call
  • Waiting for Twelfthnight
  • Stop all the firing and the fighting
  • Throw cares away
  • Everybody's crying justice, just as long as it's business first

RSS Bad Astronomy

  • What’s Fact and What’s Fiction in The Wizard of the Kremlin
  • It’s an Industry Almost Everyone Hates. Wall Street Loves It. It Could Demolish the Entire Economy.
  • Bleached Hair + an Elvis Sneer = MTV Immortality
  • The DOJ Just Made a Shocking Confession About One of Trump’s Worst Early Executive Orders
  • Todd Blanche’s Latest Audition to Be Trump’s Attorney General May Be His Most Desperate Yet
  • My Husband Wants to Get Our Kid an Unnecessary Medical Test to Appease His Mother. Uh, No.
  • I Saw My Boyfriend Feed His 2-Year-Old Nephew a Bowl of Dog Food. His “Excuse” Isn’t Cutting It.
  • SchadenFriday: Ben Shapiro’s Short—as in Abrupt—Decline
  • Samuel Alito Is Fuming That Blue States Outsmarted His Dobbs Decision
  • Slate Pears Game 274: May 15, 2026

RSS Barbara Ehrenreich

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RSS BBC: Science & Environment

  • Is it safe to swim at England's bathing sites?
  • 'Don't swim' at 12 of 14 river bathing sites, as more locations announced
  • White-tailed eagles to be released in Exmoor despite farmer warnings
  • Massive Alaska megatsunami was second largest ever recorded
  • Is this the real face of Anne Boleyn?
  • Is this actually what Anne Boleyn looked like?
  • Global forest loss slows but El Niño fires could threaten progress
  • £20m mystery gift buys London Zoo new hospital where you can watch vets work
  • UK's biggest ever environmental pollution claim reaches High Court
  • 'We're living in a shed because of river pollution'

RSS Big Picture Agriculture

  • BIG PICTURE AGRICULTURE'S LATEST NEWS
  • How to Stay Informed About Agriculture, Food, and Farming Issues
  • Dr. Walter Falcon's 2019 Iowa Farm Report
  • Agriculture Reading Picks
  • The Merits of Amaranth
  • Global Food and Agriculture Photos October 28, 2018
  • Unloading Livestock in Ohio 1938
  • Agriculture Reading Picks
  • Managed Rotational Grazing with Profitable Dairy in Minnesota
  • Global Food and Agriculture Photos October 21, 2018

RSS Bill Moyers

  • PODCAST: Dr. Bandy Lee Saw It Coming – The Violence Foretold in Donald Trump’s Election
  • Trump-Russia-Ukraine Timeline
  • Insurrection Timeline
  • Juneteenth: America’s Other Independence Day
  • March 30, 2021
  • Letters From an American: Heather Cox Richardson
  • The Pandemic Timeline
  • Racism in America
  • Bill Moyers On Democracy Podcast
  • Stop Attacks on Asian-Americans NOW!

RSS Bit Tooth Energy

  • Waterjetting 37e - Using Cavitation to disintegrate rock
  • Waterjetting 37d - Underground Drilling with Waterjets
  • Waterjetting 37c - A Drilling Diversion
  • Waterjetting 37b - How safe is it?
  • Waterjetting 37a - Removing Explosives
  • Waterjetting 36d - Going through more complex walls.
  • Waterjetting 36c - Cutting walls
  • Waterjetting 36b - Katrina anniversary and the power of water
  • Waterjetting 36a - Jet stripping of tires
  • Waterjetting 35e - A low cost version of the soil sucker

RSS Bizarro Blog

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RSS Brane Space

  • One Historical Example of How An Existential Threat Was Neutralized Thanks To Human Cooperation
  • WSJ: 'Late Night Posts Offer Peek Into Trump's Mind' - Errrrr... What Mind? The Journal Won't Go There
  • Looking Again At Basic Fractals And Some Basic Fractal Calculations
  • In A World Governed By Calamity, Criminal Regimes And Chaos It Makes Sense Young People Are Foregoing Children
  • All Experts Redux: What Is Sidereal Time and How Is It Measured?
  • A Quantitative Look At The Physics Of Landau Damping - Part 1
  • That Trump UFO Files Release: Richter Scale 10 Fanfare Matched By 'Meh' Output
  • 2073 : A SciFi Movie That's Closer To Reality Than You May Believe Given Today's AI-driven Surveillance State
  • Mensa Intermediate Algebra Inequality Problem Solution
  • Looking Again At The Two-Stream Instability Of Plasma Physics

RSS Brave New World

  • Georgia and the European Union – What Lies Ahead?
  • Islam: The Overlooked Aspect of Rumi’s Poetry
  • Remembering Nur ad-Din Zengi: The Light of Faith
  • Francophobia Among Muslims: Just Another Myth?
  • A Year in Kazakhstan: Some General Observations
  • ‘Dirilis Ertugrul’ — A History We’ve Forgotten?
  • Almaty, Kazakhstan: City of Tourists and Mountains
  • Nur-Sultan City (Astana): A Young and Futuristic City
  • Tashkent, Uzbekistan: The City with 2200+ Years of History
  • Remembering Berke Khan, 1209-66

RSS Breaking the Set

  • Abby Martin Breaks the Set One Last Time
  • Never Stop Breaking the Set!
  • Cuba Part III: The Evolution of Revolution
  • Cuba Part II: Ebola Solidarity & Castro’s Daughter on Gay Rights
  • Why Are Americans Getting Their Medical Degrees in Cuba?
  • Cuba Part I: Revolution, Sabotage & Un-Normal Relations
  • Why the CIA Won’t Give Up on Venezuela | Interview with Eva Golinger
  • [531] Bayer Infects Thousands with HIV, Clinton's Shocking Bedfellows & Netanyahu’s Cartoon Lies
  • CIA Torture Whistleblower John Kiriakou: Wake Up, You’re Next
  • Abby Responds to John McCain Promoting Breaking the Set

RSS Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

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RSS Business Insider

  • Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff said his company will likely spend $300M on Anthropic tokens
  • Andrew Left's defense plays offense, asking why the government targeted him instead of the company he called a fraud
  • Kevin O'Leary pushes back on Tucker Carlson's data center concerns: 'Welcome to America, buddy!'
  • How to get Lorde tickets for her 2026 Ultrasound World Tour
  • How to get Zach Bryan tickets: 2026 concert dates and prices compared
  • LG C6H 4K TV review: The big-screen OLED to beat in 2026
  • How to watch PGA Championship: Live streams, venue, odds
  • Berkshire Hathaway triples Alphabet stake — and reveals new bet on Delta
  • Best REI Anniversary Sale deals: Hoka, Vuori, Brooks, and more
  • An inflation-fueled surge in bond yields is knocking stocks down from all-time highs

RSS C-Realm

  • Untitled
  • Ego-Syntonic Integration
  • Private Eschatologies
  • When Forecasting becomes Prophecy
  • The Seer, the Validator, and the Pastoral Guide
  • Moralization of Dissent and Narrative Management
  • 2019 pre-COVID transition
  • Conversation with East Forest
  • Untitled
  • Blog Roll of Olde

RSS Cagle: Premium Cartoon News

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RSS Cassandra’s Legacy

  • Cassandra is Dead. Long Live Cassandra!
  • Margherita Sarfatti: the Woman Who Destroyed Mussolini
  • Are Mercenary Armies Evil? From Malatesta Baglioni to Evgeny Prighozyn:
  • The Lucky Demons that Rule us. Why Pay to Risk Your Life?
  • Cassandra: singing no harmonious tune; for it tells of no good
  • Ugo Bardi's Latest Post on "The Seneca Effect": The Collapse of Saudi Arabia's Water Supply
  • Ugo Bardi's Latest Post on "The Seneca Effect"
  • Ugo Bardi's Latest post on "The Seneca Effect"
  • Ugo Bardi's latest post on "The Seneca Effect"
  • Ugo Bardi's Latest Post on "The Seneca Effect". The Hydrogen Myth

RSS Censored News

  • U.S. is Dynamiting Kumeyaay Sacred Mountain for Border Wall Expansion
  • Protest Energy Fuels Uranium Mines at La Sal, Utah, and Grand Canyon, Saturday, May 16, 2026
  • Uranium Ore Truck Collision Endangered Navajos near Shonto on Navajo Nation
  • Border Wall Construction Destroys 1,000 Year Old Sacred Place of Hia-Ced O'odham
  • Victory for Lakota Youths Protecting Sacred Pe'Sla
  • U.N. Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues' Final Priorities -- Climate Change, Women's Rights, and Repressions, 2026
  • Lakota Youths Locked Down to Drilling Equipment at Pe'Sla
  • Mohawk Nation News 'Moccasin Makers and War Breakers'
  • Indigenous Peoples' Scissor-Sharp Words Slice Through Failures at the United Nations
  • Russia Rebuked for Calling Indigenous People 'Mentally Ill' at U.N. Permanent Forum in New York

RSS Center For Biological Diversity

  • Hawai‘i Needs Rules to Prevent Destructive, Invasive Pests From Spreading Across State, Letter Says
  • Western Gray Squirrels Granted Washington State Endangered Status
  • Lawsuit Challenges EPA Approval of Denver Oil Refinery Air Permit
  • Companies Lobbying for Weak U.N. Plastics Treaty Spend Big on U.S. Politics
  • Court Orders Do-Over for Proposed Highway Right-of-Way Through National Conservation Area in Utah
  • Petition Seeks Endangered Species Protection for Oregon’s Crater Lake Newt
  • California Court Upholds Ventura County Program to Safeguard Wildlife Connectivity
  • Miami-Dade Mayor’s Office Recommends Canceling Miami Wilds Deal
  • U.S. to Review Outdated Offshore Drilling Plans Linked to Huntington Beach Spill
  • House Republicans Target Center for Biological Diversity in Appropriations Rider

RSS Center for Investigative Journalism

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RSS Center for Economic & Policy Research

  • Keeping Score: The United States and China
  • US Escalation in the Caribbean and Latin America – Live Updates
  • How the WNBA Players Union Secured Massive Wins in Their New Contract
  • Drug Ads Are Deceptive and Deadly
  • The Perfect Gift for Trump’s Friends in the Oil Industry: A Windfall Profits Tax
  • Protect the National Flood Insurance Program’s Community Rating System
  • Trump Accounts and the No Economist Left Behind Test
  • FEMA Review Council Recommends Reducing Federal Disaster Declarations, Supports NFIP Privatization
  • Secretary Kennedy Still Doesn’t Care About Long COVID Patients
  • AI Won’t Necessarily Lead to Mass Unemployment: The Case of the Financial Industry

RSS Charles Eisenstein’s Blog

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RSS Chomsky

  • The Kind of Anarchism I Believe in, and What's Wrong with Libertarians
  • Upcoming speaking event in Boston with Noam Chomsky, Amy Goodman, and Jeremy Scahill
  • Violence and Dignity: Reflections on the Middle East (2013 Edward Said Lecture)
  • How Noam Chomsky is discussed, by Glenn Greenwald
  • Profile of Noam Chomsky in the Financial Times
  • Brief profile of Noam Chomsky in The Guardian (UK), by journalist Charles Glass
  • Rare video of Noam Chomsky interviewed with Gore Vidal in 1991
  • Complete videorecording of 1971 debate between Noam Chomsky and Michel Foucault
  • Noam Chomsky profile in the Financial Times
  • Additional video excerpt of Noam Chomsky speech at East Stroudsburg University, Pennsylvania

RSS Chris Hedges

  • The Ballot and the Bullet
  • The Yellowstone Club and the Reshaping of America’s Public Lands
  • The Plot to Turn Back the Clock on Women’s Rights
  • The Soul of W.E.B. Du Bois
  • A Darkness in the East
  • As Tick Bites Surge, Conspiracy Theories Follow
  • What You Should Know About the CEOs Traveling to China With Trump
  • Democrats Against Detente
  • Gangs, Drones and US Warships Besiege Haiti
  • State Laws Are ‘Leveraging Criminalization as a Tactic Against Trans People’

RSS Class Warfare Blog

  • Really? Back to Other Ways of Knowing?
  • A Conservative Wet Dream: Replacing Teachers with AIs
  • What Do We Know About AI’s Effect On Critical Thinking?
  • If You are a Fan of Capitalism …
  • We Were Better off with Trump Tweeting from the Crapper
  • It Is Clear, Jesus Won’t Protect Trump
  • Open Mouth, Extract Foot
  • In His Own Words
  • Abraham and Isaac: Reading Between the lines
  • Trump Accuses “Highly Unpatriotic ‘News’ Organizations” of Airing “Lies”

RSS Cliff Schecter

  • UK artist defends ‘Drawings Against Genocide’ after show cancelled
  • Gaza aid convoy in Libya prepares to head to Gaza
  • Iran war live: Lebanon, Israel extend truce; Tehran ready for more US talks
  • Activists hang Palestinian flag on the Eiffel Tower for Nakba Day
  • Mahmoud Khalil calls for deportation to be halted in light of new evidence
  • What are World Cup 2026 national team base camps and their locations?
  • Seven killed in Gaza on Nakba Day as Israel says it targets Hamas member
  • What did Trump and Xi discuss during the China summit?
  • Cuba hit by protests, blackouts amid oil shortage
  • Ex-Sinaloa security chief in Mexico arrested in US over alleged cartel ties

RSS Climate and Capitalism

  • ‘Huge transformation’ shrinks Antarctic sea ice to record lows
  • Ecosocialist Bookshelf: May 2026
  • Faster meat processing: A disaster for workers and the environment
  • Earth in 2050: A stark vision of environmental decline
  • Rush for ‘green energy’ minerals harms the world’s most vulnerable
  • Ecosocialist Bookshelf: April 2026
  • Metabolic Rifts: ‘Engaging with science to understand history and the world’
  • Video: ‘Metabolic Rifts: Capitalism’s Assault on the Earth System’
  • The world just had its second-warmest March on record
  • Online discussion of ‘Metabolic Rifts: Capitalism’s Assault on the Earth System’

RSS Climate Central

  • The looming threat for Maine’s iconic potato industry
  • Ellis Island, lighthouses among historic NJ sites flooding as seas rise
  • Still rare in Iowa, electric car powers Des Moines family’s home during blackouts
  • Storied Maine ski resort bets future on reining in high costs of warmer winters
  • Hardly any past Winter Olympic host cities will have the snow to host in 60 years
  • Data may be Colorado’s best bet to mitigate increasing wildfire risk on the Front Range
  • How sea level rise is affecting your commute to and around Atlantic City
  • ‘A moral imperative’: Monastic sisters in rural Midwest make faith-based case for climate action
  • As flooding amplifies along the East Coast, Buddhist and Jewish faith leaders join the climate fight
  • ‘Preach now or mourn in the future’: How Key West faith leaders are confronting climate change

RSS Climate Change: The Next Generation

  • Tamino's latest on the September 2024 temperature anomaly
  • Unofficial Temperature Records on July 9, 2023
  • Historic Greenland ice sheet rainfall unraveled
  • Flip Flop: Why Variations in Earth's Magnetic Field Aren't Causing Today's Climate Change
  • Let's call climate change deniers what they really are: CLIMATE LIARS!
  • Amy Westerfelt: The Reason COVID-19 and Climate Seem So Similar: Disinformation
  • Bill McKibben's response to Michael Moore's Planet of the Humans
  • WaPo: The Congo rain forest is losing ability to absorb carbon dioxide. That’s bad for climate change
  • Mark Carney of the Bank of England unveils climate stress test
  • Tropical forests may be heating Earth by 2035

RSS Climate Citizen

  • UN Oceans Conference: Australia commits to 30% highly protected marine areas by 2030, signs on to High Seas Biodiversity Treaty, Blue NDC Challenge
  • Prime Minister Albanese says global warming a factor in Tropical Cyclone Alfred and its extreme weather impacts
  • Younger people disproportionately represented in climate heat-related mortality trend according to Mexico study
  • Guest Post: Trusted partner to the Pacific, or giant fossil fuel exporter? This week, Australia chose the latter
  • INC5: Negotiations for Global Plastics Treaty 5th meeting in Busan, South Korea
  • Climate Progress in Australia's 2024 Annual Climate Statement delivered by Chris Bowen
  • Victoria releases latest (2022) Greenhouse gas emissions report showing year on year 4.3 megatonnes increase
  • Guest Post: After nearly 10 years of debate, COP29’s carbon trading deal is seriously flawed
  • Australia at COP29 Climate Diary
  • Fossil of the Day awards at COP29 in Baku, Azerbaijan

RSS Climate Code Red

  • Any sane foreign policy would put climate risks, not China, at centre stage
  • Energy security is now inseparable from national security. Australia has options, but they’re being neglected
  • Has climate policy-making gone completely off the rails?

RSS Climate Connections

  • Climate Connections Update
  • CIC’s environmental and social justice photography contest open for entries
  • FBI Harassing Activists in Pacific Northwest
  • Global Justice Ecology Project Executive Director Anne Peterman on the GE American Chestnut
  • GE Trees for Conservation? What are you Nuts?
  • Zapatistas Host Festival of Resistance and Rebellion
  • GMO Chestnuts Draw Scrutiny this Holiday
  • Photo Essay: The Pillaging of Paraguay

RSS Climate Denial Crock of the Week

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RSS Climate Progress

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RSS Climate Snapshot

  • "Carbon tsunami" lead by Enbridge Northern Gateway takes aim at BC
  • BC's tar sands? Thirteen proposed LNG projects equivalent to 13 times current BC emissions
  • Car Carbon series: cool new animation, plus the jaw-dropping impact it left out
  • Climate change fuels both California's record drought and "polar vortex" storms
  • Obama's Keystone XL delay forces Harper into the "choose first" hot seat
  • Four charts reveal gigantic climate impact from proposed Kinder Morgan mega-pipeline
  • Climate fail. Surging fossil fuels are leaving renewable energy far, far behind.
  • Twenty one ways America would destroy a safe climate -- and one way they won't: US govt. report
  • Fracking in America kills off clean energy, leading to higher emissions: EIA report
  • BP calls for global carbon price to avoid the "worst impacts of climate change"

RSS ClimateSight

  • Increasing melting of West Antarctic ice shelves may be unavoidable – new research
  • Let’s hear more from the women who leave academia (Part 2)
  • Let’s hear more from the women who leave academia.
  • Talking, typing, and the social model of disability
  • We need your help! Share your views on climate change with us.
  • Ice sheet melting: it’s not just about sea level rise
  • How I became a scientist
  • How does the Weddell Polynya affect Antarctic ice shelves?
  • Climate change and compassion fatigue
  • The silver lining of fake news

RSS Club Orlov

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RSS ClusterFuck Nation

  • Resource Scramble
  • KunstlerCast 443 — Attorney Bobbie Anne Cox on the Tribulations of New York State under the Woke Witch Hochul
  • The Earth Moves Just a Bit
  • California Death Trip
  • May 2026 | Eyesore
  • All's Not So Quiet on Any Front
  • Indictment-O-Rama
  • A Feral and Savage Party
  • The Siege of Iran, and Other Matters
  • KunstlerCast 442 — Elizabeth Nickson on Globalism and its Dark Mysteries

RSS Cocktailhag – FDL

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RSS Colin Tudge

  • Let's not bet the farm | Colin Tudge
  • Why the world needs a renaissance of small farming | Colin Tudge
  • Are modern British children suffering from 'nature deficit disorder'? | Colin Tudge and Aleks Krotoski
  • Let the country, not the City, drive the UK economy | Colin Tudge
  • Farming needs Adam Smith's invisible hand, not finance capitalism | Colin Tudge
  • Survivors by Richard Fortey - review
  • Why woodlands are wonderful
  • Fossil Ida's great big family | Colin Tudge

RSS Common Dreams: News

  • Cuban Envoy Draws 'Red Lines' Amid Specter of US Invasion and DOJ Targeting Castro Like Maduro
  • Critics Warn Polis Commuting Sentence of Tina Peters Sends 'Dangerous Message' Before Midterms
  • 'Jubilee of Christian Nationalism': Trump Event Denounced as Attack on Church and State Separation
  • Unions Decry Spanberger Veto of Collective Bargaining Bill as ‘Betrayal to Virginia's Workers’
  • 'Reporting Isn't Treason': Trump Rant at Journalists Sparks Alarm
  • From Gas to Groceries, Rural Americans Paying Heaviest Price for Trump's Iran War
  • As AIPAC Spends Millions to Oust Him, Massie Unveils Bill Requiring Pro-Israel Lobby to Register as Foreign Agent
  • ‘Big News’: Hawaii Targets Citizens United With Law Clarifying Corporations Are Not People
  • Trump Blasted for 'Unconscionable' Auto Industry Giveaway That Will Worsen Pollution
  • 'Children Are Dying': Trump-Musk Gutting of USAID Helps Push Somalia to Brink of Famine

RSS Consortium News

  • Vijay Prashad: The Necessary Future
  • Craig Murray: Hiding the Terrorism Charge
  • Hedges Report: A History of Palestine’s Resistance
  • Judge Blocks Trump Sanctions on Francesca Albanese
  • When Killing Becomes Commonplace
  • The Error in Banning the Nakba Day March
  • Unasked Questions About the War on Iran
  • Europe’s Pro-Israel Consensus Is Fraying
  • Pilger Scholarship Established at University in Melbourne
  • Craig Murray: Zionism Poisons UK’s Central Nervous System

RSS Consumer Energy Report

  • How Bulk Diesel Fuel Delivery Reduces Downtime for Industrial Operations
  • Death of the Florescent Shop Light – Energy Efficiency
  • Methanol VS Ethanol – Technical Merits and Political Favoritism
  • Bill Nye the Science Guy – Social Primate and Nuclear Energy
  • World’s Smallest Gasoline Engine – Technology Breakthrough
  • How Much Oil Does the World Produce? – Production Facts and Figures
  • World Sets New Oil Production and Consumption Records
  • What Makes Up the Cost of a Gallon of Gasoline? – Gas Price
  • Road Trip – Thoughts on the Satsop Nuclear Power Station
  • What Happened at Choren? – History & Events

RSS Corp Watch

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RSS CorrenteWire

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RSS CorrenteWire – Quick Hits

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RSS Counter Currents

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RSS CounterPunch

  • Less Freedom, More Money: Tony Blair’s Vaccine Passport
  • The U.S. Dares to Criticize Israel
  • Gaza – Betrayed In Thought and Deed
  • Boeing Workers Take a Stand & Take the Heat
  • Bank Corruption Down Under
  • Europe’s Deadly Transition From Social Democracy to Oligarchy
  • There Hasn’t Been a Day in My Life When I Haven’t Learned Something
  • Stop Meddling in Pakistan!
  • Options in America: Kill Yourself or Have a Baby
  • Pakistan Stares Into the Abyss

RSS Crooked Timber

  • The text is not the product
  • From The People’s Bank to the Banker’s Bank
  • Sunday photoblogging: Pézenas, maison consulaire
  • Sunday photoblogging: Canigou and cherry trees
  • Occasional paper: Blue Angels, Devil Hands
  • Sunday photoblogging: l’Abbaye de Valmagne
  • On Reinforcing Cynicism in the Academy
  • Occasional paper: Inconstant moon
  • Sunday photoblogging: Pézenas street
  • Bobby, I hardly Knew Ye

RSS Crooks and Liars

  • Friday Night Funnies With Susan Rice
  • Rep. Jim Jordan On High Gas Prices: 'That's Life'
  • Jesse Watters: Blacks Should 'Get In Between The Sheets' For More Representation
  • Sen. Cassidy’s Spineless Dodge On RFK Jr. For HHS
  • The Man Who Represents America On The World Stage Just Spelled Out 'Dum' To Hannity
  • Squatter Kristi Noem Finally Evicted From Coast Guard Residence
  • Whiskey Pete Suddenly Cancels Planned Troop Deployment To Poland
  • Trump Border Patrol Chief Resigns Amid Thailand Prostitute Allegations
  • Floridians Allegedly Defile Trump's Golden Statue At Doral
  • Ballroom Blitz: Trump Edition – Xi’s Got One, So We Need A Better One

RSS Cryptome

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RSS Culture Change

  • Low Cost Polluting: The Real American Dream?
  • We Did It: Sailing Cargo in the Aegean
  • Cure for Depending on 90K Oil Spewing Cargo Ships: Sail Power Makes Inroads, Now in Mediterranean
  • The Trump Presidency: Celebration of the Little Boy, and Mass Awakening
  • Stepping Back from Trump's Election: Critique of underlying US Culture in a List - 25 Limitations
  • Dirty Fossil Fuel ‘Business-As-Usual’ Tactics Spew Out of the IMO at COP22
  • The Unconnected and Unrewarded in the New Divisive Dichotomy: Being Either Online Or Not
  • The Ameliorators: a possible coalition of progressives on (e.g.) NAFTA
  • It's the 21st, and this is what a growing movement is doing
  • Pro-Climate Actions - a community flier and poster

RSS Dahr Jamail

  • Robert Newell of Black Hawk Funding Stole $668K from Cannabis Fund Investors and Paid $1.59M
  • Stephen Cloobeck Surrenders on Felony Warrant for Silencing Witnesses in Adva Lavie Case
  • David Goldman of Woodbridge Wealth Gets 12-Month SEC Bar After Selling to 2,800 Ponzi Investors
  • Nicole Walker of Woodbridge Wealth Suspended by SEC for Selling Fake Real Estate Ponzi Notes
  • Brook Church-Koegel of Woodbridge Wealth Gets 12-Month SEC Bar for Selling $1.22B Ponzi Securities
  • Baris Cabalar of PHX Financial Ran a Churning Scheme That Made $400K While 8 Clients Lost $1M
  • Roberto Masud of Masud and Co Suspended by SEC After Disbarment for Stealing $864K in Escrow
  • Douglas Farr of Bridge Investment Group Traded on Merger Tips from His Own Client and Made $35K
  • Poloniex of Circle Internet Pays $10.4M After Running an Unregistered Crypto Exchange for 2 Years
  • David Ortiz of DaveGlo Investment Group Enjoined for Selling $18M in Unregistered Oil and Gas Securities

RSS Daily Kos Comics

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RSS Damn the Matrix

  • Orders of Magnitude
  • Pre-traumatic Stress
  • Winter of Discontent
  • The Turning of the Fagus…
  • Flux and the End of Growth
  • Nafeez Ahmed on the oil crisis
  • Permacrisis
  • B with Sarah Wilson
  • Limits to Growth takes no prisoners
  • Political Tsunami is coming

RSS Dan Hagen

  • No Regret, No Anxiety
  • Things Big and Little
  • Calm Your Space
  • Whom to Please
  • Clear the Mind
  • On a Street Corner, Alive
  • Where and When Are We?
  • When I Am Among the Trees
  • Just How Stupid is Trump, Anyway?
  • Impermanence is Your Power

RSS Dangerous Intersection

  • Our Failing Institutions
  • Today’s Predominant Political Category Error
  • The Economics of Sports Betting and State Lotteries
  • Depends Who Said It
  • The Branding Problem of Free Speech on Campus

RSS Dark Ages America

  • Shifting to Substack
  • Postscript: A Passion for Cruelty: A Nation Spinning Out of Control
  • Karma Comes to America
  • And So, We Come to the End
  • The Origins of Sadism
  • Soul-Changers
  • 481
  • Calling All Texans: Major Event Coming Your Way
  • 479
  • Displacing Your Rage

RSS David Bollier

  • Jeremy Lent’s ‘Ecocivilization’ – A Bold Vision for System Change
  • Now Available -- Audiobook and Digital Versions of ‘Think Like a Commoner, Second Edition'
  • Benjamin Mako Hill on the Social Dynamics of Online Collaboration
  • Federico Savini on Degrowth and Its Future
  • Stéphanie Leyronas: France’s Bold Experiment in Commons-based Development
  • Lewis Hyde on Gift Economies and Cultural Commons
  • Relationalized Finance: Bridging the Chasm
  • Toward Socio-ecological Markets
  • Toward a New Theory of Value (and Meaning): Living Systems as Generative
  • Commoning as Relational Provisioning & Governance

RSS David Cay Johnston (Link – National Memo)

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RSS David Cay Johnston (Link – Tax Analysts)

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RSS David Harvey

  • A League of Socialist Cities: David Harvey interviewed by Novara Media
  • Press Roundup from Mexico City
  • Keynote Lecture at the Faculty of Philosophy and Letters, National Autonomous University of Mexico
  • Book Talk for The Story of Capital at the Faculty of Philosophy and Letters, National Autonomous University of Mexico
  • LSE Review of Books: David Harvey on Marx in the age of finance capital
  • Interview: Cosmonaut Magazine podcast
  • The Story of Capital: Book Launch with David Harvey in Conversation with Adam Tooze
  • Book launch of The Story of Capital on March 30th in NYC with discussant Adam Tooze
  • Publication Day for The Story of Capital
  • The New Statesman: Marxism can still change the world

RSS David Hilfiker

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RSS David McNally

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RSS David Roberts

  • Inside the movement to recognize nature as an artist
  • How plants could help us detect, and even destroy, dangerous ‘forever chemicals’
  • How a 1.3-mile stretch of street became a much-needed park space in Queens, New York
  • ‘For anybody who could use a break’: A Q&A with sci-fi author Becky Chambers
  • A world built on fossil fuels is loud. Here’s how advocates are defending peace and quiet.
  • Even your favorite YouTube creators are feeling the effects of federal cuts
  • What is it like on the climate job market right now?
  • How Italy got its citizens — and me — to adopt a rigorous recycling scheme
  • Meet the DJs spinning Earth Day into nightlife
  • France’s new high-speed train design has Americans asking: Why can’t we have that?

RSS Death by Car: Capitalism’s Drive to Carmageddon

  • 놓치지 말아야 할 고급 중고차 구입 팁 5가지 체크리스트
  • 레트로 중고차의 매력, 2026년 활용법 총정리!
  • 왜 요즘 중고차를 사는 게 좋을까? 2026년 중고차 모델 5가지 체크리스트
  • 자동차 전문가가 추천하는 사고 싶은 중고차 모델 조사하기 리스트 2026년 필수 체크리스트
  • 처음 알게 된 중고차의 초기 투자로서의 장점 5가지 체크리스트
  • 요즘 핫한 학생이 추천하는 중고차 모델 리스트 2026 체크리스트
  • 취미로 중고차 수집을 시작할 때 필요한 사전 지식 2026년 가이드
  • 중고차로 인한 비용 절감 효과: 2026년 절약하는 5가지 방법
  • 요즘 인기가 높은 중고차, 직장인 선택 비결 5가지 총정리
  • 친환경 중고차 구입 방법에 숨겨진 혜택들, 2026년 절약 가이드

RSS Decline of the Empire

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RSS Deep Green Resistence News Service

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RSS Deepak Tripathi’s Diary

  • Netanyahu’s “Forever War” on Gaza: What Made it Unsustainable
  • The Fall of Syria’s Bashar al-Assad: What it Means
  • United Kingdom Heading for General Election
  • Assertions of Sovereignty: Dimensions of Domestic and Foreign Policy
  • After Brexit: The State of the United Kingdom

RSS Democratic Underground

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RSS Democratic Underground – Breaking News

  • Hersheypark 'optimistic' to avoid strike amid negotiations with union
  • David Burke dead: Sherlock Holmes star dies as tributes pour in
  • US moves to end job protections for hundreds of health department workers
  • LIRR strike threat: Contract talks drag on in final hours before walkout that could strand 300,000 daily commuters
  • Federal judge blocks old-growth logging project on Oregon coast
  • Doctor leading Trump's hantavirus response is a penile specialist who spread Covid conspiracies: 'Erection Connection'
  • Inflation rate projected to hit 6% in the second quarter, top economic forecasters say
  • Pentagon rush to counter drone threat may be undermining safety standards, Army explosive safety specialist warns
  • DOJ requests 1,500 more National Guard troops for planned DC 'summer surge'
  • Claudine Longet, Entertainer Who Shot Olympian Boyfriend, Dies at 84

RSS Democratic Underground – Good Reads

  • 'A racist streamer shot a Black man in Tennessee. Viewers rewarded him handsomely.'
  • Consumers sue Amazon for not refunding Trump tariff costs
  • They Don't Retire: The Farmers, Fishers, and Ranchers Who Keep Working Past 65
  • 'Trucks Are Just Driving The Oil Across The Arabian Desert To Avoid The Straight Of Hormuz'
  • Jeff Tiedrich - meet the smitten cultist who finds racist memes for Dear Leader to post
  • MS NOW-Trump administration's bogus push to prove discrimination against white men falters
  • Opinion: RFK Jr's Mad 'MAHA' Agenda Sees Mumps Mount a Comeback
  • AOC Doesn't Owe Marjorie Taylor Greene a Damn Thing (and Cenk Uygur Knows It)
  • Trump's China Trip Exposed as So Empty That All He Got Was Seeds
  • Large Ebola Outbreak Is Declared in Congo

RSS Democracy Now

  • "Israel: What Went Wrong?": Holocaust Scholar Omer Bartov & Haaretz's Gideon Levy Debate Zionism
  • Nakba Day: Muhammad Shehada on Israel's Ethnic Cleansing in Gaza & Ongoing Palestinian Resilience
  • Headlines for May 15, 2026
  • "Here Where We Live Is Our Country”: Molly Crabapple on Resurfacing the Jewish History of Anti-Zionism
  • Xi Warns Trump of Potential "Conflict" over Taiwan in Beijing Summit on Iran, Trade, Tech & More
  • Headlines for May 14, 2026
  • Free Salah Sarsour: Muslim & Jewish Communities Demand ICE Release Milwaukee Mosque Leader
  • Astra Taylor on AI Data Center Resistance & Fighting "Billionaire Big Tech Agenda"
  • FDA Chief Pushed Out in Latest Sign of Public Health Chaos Under RFK Jr.
  • Headlines for May 13, 2026

RSS Derrick Jensen

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RSS Desdemona Despair

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RSS Desertification

  • UNCCD Press ReleaseG7 declaration recognizes land degradation and drought as global security risks  
  • Prevention Vital Against Desertification
  • Native Vegetation Configuration Improves Stability of Restored Desertified Grasslands in Northern China
  • how-saudi-arabia-is-using-wastewater-to-build-a-green-corridor-in-the-desert
  • Much of humanity may face hot-dry extremes five times more often by end-century
  • Engineers installed 7 million solar panels in the desert and they began sustaining themselves, turning the landscape into vibrant green
  • Algiers conference to tackle Africa desertification
  • Smart tech empowers desertification control in Inner Mongolia
  • Anti-Desertification: The battle to breathe life into Inner Mongolia’s harsh land
  • 2 years on: China’s ‘desert wheat farms’ show the seeds of success

RSS deSmog Blog

  • Q & A: The Climate Crisis as a Crisis of Modern Men
  • How Will Reform Rule Affect Local Climate Policy?
  • Event | Off the Record: How to Talk to Journalists, Lawyers, and Activist Organizations
  • Oil Pipelines Align With Jesus, Danielle Smith Tells Christian Leaders
  • The Elections that Turned Climate into a Defining Political Fault Line
  • In Louisiana, Data Center Hype Faces AI Regulation and Community Resistance
  • Gulf Royal Family Banks Over €70 Million in EU Farming Funds
  • Nigel Farage Has Accepted £2 Million Since Becoming an MP
  • Former BC Premier Gordon Campbell: Carbon Capture ‘Doesn’t Work’
  • Event | How Climate Denialism Is Evolving With Trump in Office

RSS Digbys Blog

  • Untitled
  • They can save the world by @BloggersRUs
  • Just drifting: R.I.P. Buck Henry By Dennis Hartley
  • It looks like he wants to take Iraq's oil money
  • Untitled
  • Let's not forget who worked with Suleimani's IRGC
  • You can't win if you don't show up to play by @BloggersRUs
  • Friday Night Soother
  • I'm just going to leave this here.
  • Who wants to be the next Andy McCabe?

RSS Disinfo – Ecology

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RSS Dispatches from the Underclass

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RSS Dissent Magazine

  • Capital of the American Century
  • Know Your Enemy: The Seven Year Anniversary Mailbag Episode
  • Doubling Down
  • The Many Sides of Shame
  • How Mamdani Can Build Mass Engagement
  • A Constitutional Moment in Hungary?
  • Know Your Enemy: Peter Thiel and the Antichrist
  • The Bronx Still Burns
  • Power and Abuse in the United Farm Workers
  • Building a Post-Trump Foreign Policy

RSS Dissident Voice

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RSS Do the Math

  • Two Murphys, Part 3
  • Two Murphys, Part 2
  • Two Murphys, Part 1
  • Levels of Faith
  • Dumb Geniuses
  • Earth Abides
  • Empty Records
  • Dream Presentation
  • The Magic of Feedback
  • Why February?

RSS Dollars & Sense Blog

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RSS Doug Stanhope

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RSS Douglas Rushkoff

  • Foreward to The New Inquisition
  • Program Or Be Programmed: 11 Commands for the AI Future
  • Substack
  • Nonbinary: A Memoir – Afterward
  • Artificial Creativity
  • Douglas Rushkoff: Silicon Valley’s elite prize data over reality, and it’s hurting us all
  • Breaking from the Pace of the Net
  • The Model Isn’t The Territory, Either
  • ‘We will coup whoever we want!’: the unbearable hubris of Musk and the billionaire tech bros
  • Team Human ep. 248: I Will Not Be Autotuned – Live from All Tech Is Human’s Responsible Tech Mixer

RSS Dr. Paul Craig Roberts

  • The Issue is Hegemony and its victims are unaware
  • Shutup and Eat Your Chemicals
  • The Western World Exists Only as an Image of What It Once Was
  • Is Trump Profiting from Inside Information?
  • The Despicable Zionist Robert Kagan is trying to shame Trump into nuking Iran by calling US a Paper Tiger defeated by Iran
  • PCR and Nima Discuss the World Situation
  • PCR Interviewed by Afshin Rattansi
  • Former British Ambassador Craig Murray Explains that Justice Has Departed the British Isles
  • Israeli Again Attacking Its Favorite Foe–Women and Children in Villages.
  • Putin’s Failure as a World Leader has Cleared the Path to WW III

RSS Dredd Blog

  • The Question Is: How Much Acceleration Is Involved In SLR? - 14
  • APNDX Golden Gauges
  • APNDX GAUGES A-D
  • APNDX GAUGES E - H
  • APNDX GAUGES I - L
  • APNDX GAUGES M-P
  • APNDX GAUGES Q-S
  • APNDX GAUGES T-Z
  • The El Nino/La Nina Chronicles - 4
  • The World According To Measurements - 28

RSS Ear to the Ground – Truth Dig

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RSS Early Warning

  • New York Not Close to Exiting Lockdown
  • Is New York Containing Covid?
  • New York vs Italy
  • NYC Update - 46.5% increase Sunday over Saturday.
  • We Are About to Lose New York City to Covid
  • Containing Covid-19 (Or Not)
  • Covid-19 update
  • Covid-19 Infection Rates
  • Global Carbon Sink Holding Up So Far
  • The Wake-Up Call from David Buckel

RSS Earth First

  • “UNC Dildo-Boy” accosts homophobic preacher, releases anti-technology declaration
  • Subpoena caps bad week for fossil fuel
  • Less Than 60 Hours Left to Support Indigenous Land Defenders!
  • Shh! That Zookeeper Is a Total *&^%#!
  • Marcellus Shale Earth First! Aerial Blockade Celebrates 2 Weeks
  • Sabotaging the Badger Cull
  • Occupied Abenaki Lands Desecrated by 9/11 Memorial Protesters Intervene to Address U.S. Imperialism & Genocide
  • The Earth First! Newswire Has Moved
  • Massive Mine Proposed at Oak Flat, Sacred Tribal Land
  • Wharton Coal Prep Plant Spill Turns Boone County, WV River White

RSS Earth Observatory: Image of the Day, Natural Hazards, and News

  • NASA Calibration Instrument Launches to International Space Station
  • Astrobiology Publications
  • NASA Science, Cargo Launch on 34th SpaceX Resupply Mission to Station
  • SpaceX Dragon Lifts Off to Resupply Expedition 74 Crew
  • Dragon Counts Down to Launch to Resupply Space Station
  • Helio and You: Seasons on Earth, Mars, and Beyond
  • TDAMM SIG Meeting, 18 May 2026
  • AI/ML STIG Lecture Series, 18 May 2026
  • ASTRA Initiative Seminar, 22 May 2026
  • AGN SIG Vision Series, 26 May 2026

RSS Earth Observatory: Image of the Day

  • NASA Calibration Instrument Launches to International Space Station
  • Astrobiology Publications
  • NASA Science, Cargo Launch on 34th SpaceX Resupply Mission to Station
  • SpaceX Dragon Lifts Off to Resupply Expedition 74 Crew
  • Dragon Counts Down to Launch to Resupply Space Station
  • Helio and You: Seasons on Earth, Mars, and Beyond
  • TDAMM SIG Meeting, 18 May 2026
  • AI/ML STIG Lecture Series, 18 May 2026
  • ASTRA Initiative Seminar, 22 May 2026
  • AGN SIG Vision Series, 26 May 2026

RSS Earth Observatory: Natural Hazards

  • NASA Calibration Instrument Launches to International Space Station
  • Astrobiology Publications
  • NASA Science, Cargo Launch on 34th SpaceX Resupply Mission to Station
  • SpaceX Dragon Lifts Off to Resupply Expedition 74 Crew
  • Dragon Counts Down to Launch to Resupply Space Station
  • Helio and You: Seasons on Earth, Mars, and Beyond
  • TDAMM SIG Meeting, 18 May 2026
  • AI/ML STIG Lecture Series, 18 May 2026
  • ASTRA Initiative Seminar, 22 May 2026
  • AGN SIG Vision Series, 26 May 2026

RSS Earth Policy Institute Blog

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RSS Ecocide Alert

  • WordPress.com Changelog: AI Assistant Opt-in on All Current Paid Plans and A New Way to Build Sites from Your Terminal
  • Go From Idea to Live Ecommerce Store in One Hour
  • A New Theme for Short-Form Blogging on WordPress.com
  • Your WordPress Expert in the Terminal: Try the Studio Code Beta
  • WordPress.com Changelog: Try the WordPress 7.0 Beta and a One-Click Solution for Plugin Errors
  • Spry Fox Has Been Making Games for 15 Years. Their Blog Is Still One of Their Best Growth Tools.
  • How to Build an Endless Stream of Content Ideas with WordPress and Claude
  • How HealthPress.io Used WordPress.com to Power a Growing European Lifestyle Health Movement
  • Murphy Levesque Co-Founded an Animal Rescue at 11. Her WordPress.com Site Helped Save Over 100 Animals.
  • What We Learned (and Loved) at WordCamp Asia 2026 in Mumbai

RSS Ecohuman World

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RSS Eco-Shock News

  • Radio Ecoshock: El Nino wildfires & Amazon tipping
  • Radio Ecoshock: Climate: Hunger World
  • Radio Ecoshock: War To World: Climate Hits Harder
  • Radio Ecoshock: Life After the Crash II
  • Radio Ecoshock: When Summer Comes in Winter
  • Radio Ecoshock: High Heat, Long Future
  • Radio Ecoshock: While you were thinking of something else…your planet burns
  • Radio Ecoshock: The Awful Bright Side of War?
  • Radio Ecoshock: War Against the Atmosphere – Iran
  • Radio Ecoshock: Smoky Twilight

RSS Ecological Headstand

  • Dilke, Chapman, and Dahlberg Pop-ups
  • For the Abolition of the Wages System!
  • The Incredible Shrinking Blog
  • Keynes "hadn't got round to it"
  • Napoleon Solow and the Phantom Mechanism
  • Mathiness, Growth and Increasing Returns
  • Viral Gyro Spiral
  • Untitled
  • Untitled
  • Never Mind the Bollocks. Here's the Gyro.

RSS Ecological Sociology

  • Commons Enabling Infrastucture
  • A Short History of Progress: Book Review
  • Foucault, Power, Truth and Ecology
  • Democratizing Capital at Scale: Cooperative Enterprise and Beyond
  • Stanford: Climate Change Ten Times Faster than Previous 65 Million Years
  • Beyond Market and State: The Renaissance of the Commons
  • What Then Must We Do? The Next American Revolution
  • John Thackery: Limits to Resilience
  • Timothy Mitchell: Carbon Democracy
  • The Informal Economy Blog

RSS Ecologise

  • Deep Warming
  • My Continent Is Not Your Climate Laboratory
  • Why this Maharashtra village is fighting for the long forgotten Gramdan Act?
  • Ignored health risks, bungled pilot projects, bonanza for Dutch firm: Modi Govt. forces fortified rice on poor
  • Protests against Ratnagiri Refinery: Skeletons in the Development Closet
  • What will be the history of India without the history of its plant life?
  • We are ‘greening’ ourselves to extinction
  • [WATCH] We are living in a deluded world: Interview with Iain McGilchrist
  • The Avocados of Wrath
  • How Mr Miyawaki Broke My Heart

RSS Economic Hardship Reporting Project

  • Why So Few Babies? We Might Have Overlooked the Biggest Reason of All
  • Brian Goldstone Wins the Pulitzer Prize!
  • Minneapolis Grapples with the Impact of Trump’s Largest Immigration Crackdown Yet
  • EHRP-Supported Documentary “Wood Street” Keeps Winning!
  • EHRP Fellow Elliott Woods Wins MOLLY Prize for Investigative Journalism
  • Welcome to the Insecurity-Industrial Complex
  • Notes of an Economist on Food Stamps
  • It’s How Millions of Americans Afford Food. Trump Has Thrown It Into Chaos. The Toll Is Bigger Than You Realize.
  • ‘I don’t go out’: Vermont’s undocumented dairy workers live in fear after immigration raids
  • The Wrong Kind of Air: South Memphis Fights Against Data Centers

RSS Economic Undertow

  • Ending The War In Ukraine By Attacking Russian Railroads
  • The Good, the Bad and the Takfiri (Repost from 2014)
  • Z Marks the Spot
  • The Death of Economics
  • Cars and More Cars …
  • Repost From 2015: Pied Piper of Dumb Money
  • The Arc of the Moral Universe
  • Meet the New Year, Same as the Old Year
  • David Graeber Dead …
  • Frieden In Unserer Zeit, Peace In Our Time

RSS EcoWorldView

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RSS Empire Burlesque

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RSS Empirical Magazine

  • From the Empirical Archives: Genius or Folly?
  • From the Empirical Archives: Nights Such as These
  • From the Empirical Archives: Second Time Foster Child
  • From the Empirical Archives: A Moment with Mary Nash-Pyott
  • From the Empirical Archives: In the Shade of a Cave
  • From the Empirical Archives: In Search of a Good Teacher
  • From the Empirical Archives: The Circle and the Pyramid
  • From the Empirical Archives: Why Human Rights Matter
  • From the Empirical Archives: Arizona
  • From the Empirical Archives: The Offer by Jennifer Hanno

RSS EmptyWheel

  • Trump’s Idea of Charity: Terrorists, Cop Assailants, and Child Sex Predators
  • Gatekeeper to Narcissistic Meltdown
  • The FBI Director Proved He Will Lie about Criminal Defendants
  • Will the Very Able Caine Expose the Devil Inside Trump’s Garden of Paradise?
  • Humiliation
  • Fridays with Nicole Sandler
  • Seb Gorka Orders Europe to Harbo[u]r His Kind of Terrorists
  • Cole Allen Catalogs Jeanine Pirro’s Verbal Diarrhea
  • Kash Patel Changes His Mind about Sarah Fitzpatrick’s Sources
  • The Loaner AUSAs Todd Blanche Disavows

RSS End of More

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RSS Energy Balance

  • "The Little Things That Run the World": Film screening + Panel Discussion, with Transition Town Reading, 6.00 pm on Tuesday, June 16th (2026).
  • “What If a Better World Were Possible?" A film made by Transition Town Reading.
  • Why are Fuel Prices so High?
  • Strait of Hormuz Chokehold Released for Now, but Global Supply Chains Remain at Risk.
  • "The Energy and Climate Conundrum," talk by Prof. Chris Rhodes, on April 28th (2026), 7-9 pm, Zero Degrees Reading.
  • Is the Hormuz Chokehold a Foretaste of Peak Oil?
  • “The Empathy Project.”
  • Wresting Peace from the Polycrisis.
  • “Ecosophia.” Film Screening at the Reading Biscuit Factory, Tuesday, October 28th (2025), 7.00 pm.
  • "Ecosophia": Beyond Greenwash — Cultivating Ecological Wisdom for Our Time (Film Review, by Chris Rhodes).

RSS Environment & Food Justice

  • National Association for Chicana and Chicano Studies Statement on the Climate Crisis
  • La Lucha por La Sierra | Scion of Texas Oil Barons Seeks to Overturn Historic Use Rights to the Sangre de Cristo Land Grant
  • Biopiracy in Mexico | Foundation stealing wild beehives in Yucatán
  • Deep Seeds at the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues | April 2018
  • Exclusive Update - Monsanto in Mexico | Corporate impunity and the beekeeper struggle against transgenic soybeans
  • Student Blogs | Race, Gender, and Settler Colonial Violence
  • Notas de Campaña | Por una Tortilla 100 ciento Nixtamalizada
  • Campaign Notes | For 100 Percent Nixtamalized nonGMO Tortillas | Part One
  • Maize: Our Identity, Our Food | Photo Exhibit of Indigenous Corn Farmers Featured at UN Headquarters
  • Protecting the Sacred in Corn | Seed Sovereignty Documents | Berenice Sánchez Intervention on the Protection of Indigenous Agroecosystems presented to the UNPFII-2018 | 1 of 2

RSS Envisionation Blog

  • Antarctica’s Warning Sign: Inside the Collapse of Hektoria Glacier
  • Why Do Politicians Keep Pushing North Sea Drilling When It Won’t Lower Your Bills? Intercview with Ed Matthew, E3G Think Tank
  • Last Resort: Could Geoengineering Save the AMOC from Collapse?
  • Have The UK Green’s Abandoned Climate For Far-Left Populism?
  • Why We Need A Climate Solvency Plan – Sir David King
  • New Research: Climate Change is Accelerating – It’s Getting Hotter Faster!
  • El Niño 2026: The Strong Heat Spike That Could Break Global Temperature Records – Interview with Dr Jennifer Francis
  • Following the money: Is the Blair Institute’s North Sea oil and gas pivot good for Britain?
  • Beyond the Threshold: Overshoot, Irreversibility and the Vanishing 1.5ºC Window
  • 2025 In Climate Review: AMOC, Overshoot & Emergency Briefings

RSS Extraenvironmentalist Blog and Podcasts

  • [ Episode #47 // Power Transition ]
  • [ Episode #46 // Recovering Environmentalists ]
  • [ Episode #45 // Opening Money ]
  • [ Episode #39 // Debunking Economics ]
  • [ Episode #16 // Powering the Dream ]
  • [ Episode #15.2 // Brotherhood of the Screaming Abyss // Part II ]
  • [ Episode #15.1 // Brotherhood of the Screaming Abyss // Part I ]
  • [ Episode #14 // Discovering Dirt ]
  • [ Episode #10 // Brilliant ]
  • [ Episode #9 // Economics of Happiness ]

RSS ExtraEnvironmentalist’s Videos

  • [ Rick Wolff // A Cure for Capitalism ]
  • [ Firefly Gathering ]
  • [ John Kraus // Knife Sharpener ]
  • [ Jimmy McMillan // Rent is Too Damn High ]
  • [ Nate Hagens // From Wall St. to Ecological Economics // Part 1 ]
  • [ Dennis McKenna // Tools for a Culture of Healing ]
  • [ Montreal Degrowth Conference // Mini-Doc ]
  • [ Charles Eisenstein // Living Without Economic Growth ]
  • [ James Howard Kunstler // American Dream on Hiatus ]
  • [ Peter Victor // Ecological Economics]

RSS ExtraGeographic

  • Why Coventry council is using Palantir AI
  • CMAT at Glastonbury 2025. Over the barriers, into the crowd
  • We live and we die, we know not why / But I’ll be with you when the deal goes down
  • How to stop dogs barking
  • Review: What did you do yesterday? podcast
  • Gracie Abrams is resonating
  • Paul Heaton at Glastonbury 2024. Join the caravan of love
  • All Gregs on Desert Island Discs have to select The Wonder Stuff
  • Jimmy Buffett, Tropical Rock and the deadheads with credit cards
  • Trapped in the David Letterman Late Show archive

RSS Facts for Working People

  • Opinion: Trump in China, the Summit” with no real agenda and no concrete agreements ends.
  • New Counterterror Strategy Eyes Tucker Carlson
  • Green Party and UK Elections. Polanski: the Next Left Smear Campaign
  • Opinion: If Starmer gets his way, Reform - not the Greens - will be his legacy
  • Are The Iranian Demands Really Unreasonable as Trump Says?
  • Israel Today, Like American Slavery in The South, is an Entire Nation Gone Mad.
  • 250 Years of the Same Old Racket: A Civil Servant's May Day Confession
  • India: a further swing to the right
  • ‘No fear of roaring lions’: Iran has a long history of standing firm against outside aggressors
  • Ken Klippenstein: Insane Pre-Crime Strategy Unveiled for Leftist “Extremists"

RSS Fair: Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting

  • Slashing Climate, Weather and Ocean Research to Pay for 32 Hours of Iran War
  • NYT on Met Gala: If You Don’t Like It, Shut Up
  • The Regressive Ideologies Behind the ‘Baby Bust’ Panic
  • Climate Coverage Plunges, Though Crisis More Dire Than Ever
  • US’s Erosion of the Right to Cartoon Is No Laughing Matter
  • NYT Covers Iran War With No Reporters in Iran
  • Trump’s FTC Wages a War on Media Criticism
  • Pete Hegseth’s War on Journalists (and Iran Too)
  • Three Massive Funds Control a Chunk of Most Media: Maybe that's why you might not have heard of them
  • US Media Mostly Care for Iranians When They Can Be Used to Justify Bombing

RSS Fairewinds

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RSS Fairfax Climate Watch

  • Ricerca OpenAI: le PMI italiane risparmiano 5 ore a settimana grazie all’IA
  • Si delinea il programma di secsolutionforum 2026
  • Leadership femminile: ComunicazioneZen supporta le donne con un percorso di empowerment tra mente, corpo e voce
  • ATON CHIUDE IL PRIMO TRIMESTRE A +55%: L’AI ACCELERA LA CRESCITA
  • UNIBG AL 1° POSTO ALLA MATHWORKS GLOBAL DRONE STUDENT CHALLENGE 2026
  • Iride Acque continua a crescere. 3 milioni da Credem e seconda acquisizione in tre anni
  • Anticiclone africano verso l’Italia: ecco quando arriva il primo caldo estivo
  • Su cosa risparmiano davvero gli italiani? Gli alert di prezzo nell’era del caro vita
  • Cresce il mercato dell’accumulo industriale: Renovis supervisiona in Cina i test di un sistema BESS industriale da 40 MWh
  • Economia circolare: Italia leader in Europa, ma ancora troppo dipendente dalle importazioni di materiali

RSS Farooque Chowdhury’s Diary

  • Road rage faces student spirit
  • Fires within the Arctic Circle
  • A Facebook post on quota mobilisation
  • Marx in Bangladesh
  • Drug money and ambulance
  • The disinformation campaign on Venezuela
  • Bangladesh Liberation War Exposed A Neocolonial State’s Failure
  • DIGNITY OF TEACHERS AND AN ADMISSION TEST : THE EDUCATION MARKET EXHIBITS ……….
  • The Ambiguity: The Case Of Democracy
  • Blackmailing Bankers Now Stage A Coup In Greece

RSS Feasta

  • Webinar: Securing our Food Sovereignty
  • Rethinking Systems: Growing Local Strength for People and Planet
  • Finding steady ground in a time of crisis
  • Governing For The Future: Institutions And Practices
  • Oil Windfall Profits Tax & Dividend
  • Podcast: the Role of Creativity in Health
  • Feasta Annual Report 2025
  • Report from MERGE Policymaker Roundtable on Sustainable and Inclusive Wellbeing, Jan 22 2026
  • COP-30 Delegate Reports
  • Beyond the Artist Subsidy: Universal Basic Income as a Radical Shift in How People Receive Their Money

RSS FireDogLake

  • David vs. Goliath: Consumer Watchdog Gets Their Day in Court With Googl
  • What I Care About Is the Social Safety Net
  • Obama Meets With Labor, Progressive Groups Today
  • What the Marijuana Legalization Polling in 2012 Says About Its Prospects Moving Forward
  • Petraeus Affair Shows Dominant Power of Government Surveillance State
  • Pelosi to Speak to House Democrats Amid Rumors That She Will Step Down From Leadership
  • United Parcel Service to Boy Scouts of America – no funds for your anti-gay org
  • For the Long-Term Unemployed, It Is A Fiscal Cliff
  • Love In The House Of Spy
  • Fatster’s Roundup

RSS Fish Out of Water

  • A Miraculous Rebirth in the Gulf of Mexico
  • Ice Detention of Legal Irish Man Married to U.S. Citizen Creates Major International Incident
  • Stretched Polar Vortex set to Split in Two likely leading to Severe Tornado outbreaks in March
  • Pray for Jamaica then send money: Hurricane Melissa’s 185mph winds coming ashore.
  • Key satellite data for Hurricane intensification forecasts and sea ice extent terminated by Trump
  • Particularly Dangerous Situation for Memphis Region: Tornado outbreak updated
  • Tornado outbreak this weekend from Plains to Carolinas enhanced by Stratospheric Warming Updated
  • Harris winning North Carolina & Georgia – NY Times – strong early voting for Kamala
  • PWB: The Community Cats of old San Juan Puerto Rico
  • Aurora Borealis in North Carolina

RSS Foreign Confidential

  • Film History: the French New Wave
  • Nine Beautiful Places to Visit in Slovenia
  • Top 10 European Islands to Visit
  • Little Europe: the Amazing Microstates
  • Chinese Virologist, MD, PhD, Says Coronavirus Made in Wuhan Lab
  • Rebels and Spies: the [GREAT] Graphic Novels of Vittorio Giardino
  • Deep in Red China ...
  • Preview Video Comic Strip Hero Battles Totalitarian China
  • Dystopian Graphic Novel Depicts China as Nazi-Like Occupier of USA
  • Coming Soon to Your Digital Device: Dack Dixon, Special Agent

RSS FracTracker

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RSS George Monbiot (Alternet)

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RSS George Monbiot (Official Home Page)

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RSS Get Real List: Chris Nelder

  • Moving on…
  • My new gig
  • Announcing the Energy Transition Show
  • Guest appearance on The Energy Gang podcast
  • My most recent project: NPV+
  • Taking over the grid
  • The straight dope on oil prices
  • New report casts doubt on fracking’s future
  • Stranded asset risks are larger than anyone thinks
  • Cleantech is sexy again

RSS Gil Smart

  • With Gil Smart on guns, the NRA
  • Gil Smart right on development
  • Right on, Gil Smart
  • Gil Smart makes sense
  • Insightful is Gil Smart
  • Gil Smart wrong on gun ownership
  • Gil Smart goes off the deep end
  • Gil Smart: What's the future of work in America?
  • Gil Smart: What’s causing the rise in panhandling?
  • Invasion of Gil snatchers?

RSS Glen Ford – Black Agenda Report

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RSS Global Guerrillas

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RSS Global Occupy News

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RSS Global Oneness Project

  • Farewell RSS Feeds

RSS Global Research

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RSS Global Research CA

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RSS Gonzalo Lira

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RSS Green is the New Red

  • Trump Supporter Promises Legislation to Label Protest as “Economic Terrorism”
  • Violence against environmentalists is now at an all-time high
  • “To Build a Fire”: New Split EP With “Old Lines” and Will Potter
  • “It changes who you are—forever. What you do with that change is what defines who you are.”
  • Exclusive: New Virtual Reality Investigation Goes Inside Factory Farms
  • New Sticker — Animal Rights Activists Must “Join or Die”
  • “Truth and Power” TV series features Will Potter on “eco-terrorism,” ag-gag laws, and investigative journalism
  • This woman rowed straight into a hurricane. And you should too.
  • 6 Lessons From How the FBI and Media Treat Militia Groups
  • Here’s How One Activist Convinced the FBI to Leave Him Alone

RSS Green on Huffington Post

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RSS Greenpeace Blogs

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RSS Greg Palast

  • 9+ million Muslim voters purged in 4 states Trump “SAVE” plan takes a test drive in India
  • Frank Sinatra, Donald Trump and My Partner
  • Mr. Colbert, I’m not laughing anymore
  • Trump, the Pirate of Hormuz
  • Pam Bondi’s Lobbyist Loot Built on Free Market in Human Misery
  • Trump’s Tanker Toll Triumph
  • 1931 is here again. We hope.
  • Iran has won, jamming Trump’s bombs right up his Strait of Hormuz
  • Hormuz BluesBush should show Trump how you seize another nation’s oil
  • How Do We Defeat Voter Suppression?A Tribute to the Spirit of Selma

RSS Gregor Macdonald

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RSS Grinning Planet

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RSS Grist

  • Nebraska wonders which is riskier: The fires it starts, or the fires it fights
  • The surprising climate fix that Democrats and Republicans both love
  • Energy bills keep rising. These candidates in Georgia say they can help.
  • Once dismissed as weeds, native plants are now flying off the shelves
  • Alex Honnold: ‘You just see how much it matters’
  • Climate change is driving a tick boom. MAHA is blaming Bill Gates.
  • First crypto, now data centers: How tech is reshaping this North Carolina community
  • The Brazilian government keeps giving out mining licenses in the Amazon – in spite of evidence of gold ‘laundering’
  • Wall Street is betting big on clean energy tech
  • The EPA wants to shift monitoring of toxic coal ash to states

RSS Growth Busters

  • 97: The Wit and Wisdom of Paul Ehrlich
  • 96: Paul Ehrlich (1932-2026): Behaving Against Our Interests
  • 95: Technology – Fast and Furious Into Overshoot
  • 94: Reporting on Population – Sense and Nonsense
  • 93: Ezra Klein’s Abundance Delusion

RSS Guernica Mag

  • Notes on Going Viral
  • Cupid’s Bow
  • Snow
  • Self-Portrait with Expired Green Card
  • Cherry Coke and Chevron Lights
  • when they tied us to the fence
  • I am unsure if this poem has been properly executed) / I’m Karelian
  • Crow Language / Crow Testament / Crow Gospel
  • Canvases
  • I Was Trying to Photograph a Feeling: Showkat Nanda on Buried Archives, Generational Memory, and Dreaming Against Forgetting in Kashmir

RSS Guy McPherson’s Blog

  • McPherson Interviewed by the Homeless Romantic, Chris Jeffries
  • Frequently Wrong, I Continue to Predict
  • A Stick of Dynamite Can Ruin Your Day
  • McPherson Interviewed by the Homeless Romantic, Chris Jeffries
  • Science Snippets: Upwelling of the California Current Increases Acidification
  • Science Snippets: Point of No Return for Dolphins, Orcas
  • Science Snippets: We Passed Peak Arable Land

RSS Health After Oil

  • Public Health’s Response to Decline: Loyalty to the 1%
  • Health systems, neoliberalism, and the end of growth: The World Health Organization in denial
  • Postcard from the Frontline
  • Power, Identity and Social Change as We Enter Degrowth
  • Health groups put climate first in election poll – Media release 5 August 2013

RSS Hot Topic: Global Warming and the Future of New Zealand

  • Postcards from La La Land #132: time warps and twaddle
  • The final cut: crank paper on NZ temperature record gets its rebuttal – warming continues unabated
  • Anthropogenic climate change is real: pithy post-punk anthem for the Trump generation
  • Why (and how) cheaper solar power, batteries, electric and autonomous vehicles are going to change our world over the next 5 years
  • At last it can be revealed: climate change researcher describes challenge of pulling off worldwide global warming conspiracy

RSS How to Save the World

  • Links of the Month: May 2026
  • What I Should Have Said
  • Outraged Opinions Are Not News
  • AI’s Biggest Beneficiary: Organized Crime
  • The Voices of Collapse Denialism
  • Signs of Collapse: When We Normalize Abnormality
  • Resistance Is More Than Just Disobedience
  • How I Imagine It All Ended
  • Are You Ready For This?
  • How I Live With My Self

RSS I am Not a Number

  • THE ART OF THE POSSIBLE?
  • Alt-Right conspiracy theories are obviously true… except they are not.
  • The civil war in the LP was NEVER about antisemitism.
  • English patriotism and the left – a political conundrum
  • The new Reclaim Party and the ‘culture wars’ – the incoherence of our two party system and the failure of liberalism
  • An alternative to the Labour Party?

RSS I Cite

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RSS Iamronen

  • AI & Quality
  • 1000 Petals
  • How to draw the Sri Yantra
  • Mushrooms, second encounter
  • Michael Levin | Cell Intelligence in Physiological and Morphological Spaces
  • Religiousness in Yoga Part 17: Nirodha
  • Religiousness in Yoga Part 16: Jñāna, Bhakti, Mantra, Rāja, Kriyā, Karma, Laya, Tantra, Haṭha, Kuṇḍalinī
  • Religiousness in Yoga Part 15: Antarāya, Iśvara-praṇidhāna
  • Religiousness in Yoga Part 14: Bandha
  • Religiousness in Yoga Part 13: Antaraṅga Sādhana, Saṃyama, Kaivalya

RSS Ian Welsh

  • The Haters Guide To Post-Modernism
  • It Doesn’t Matter What Europe’s GDP Is
  • The Oreshnik
  • Is It Better To Be Raped Or Be A Rapist?
  • The Star of David Is Getting the Swastika Treatment
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – May 10, 2026
  • Open Thread
  • The Law Of Elite Consequences Continues To Demolish America
  • Iran Has Broken The US Middle East Raj
  • American Elites Have Reverse Empire Dysmorphia

RSS Idea Explorer

  • Life vs. Artificial Life
  • Can’t Give Up
  • Best Future
  • Limits to Superiority
  • The World Is Dying and We’re Doing This
  • Belief and Reality
  • Value Statement
  • Interactions of Value
  • Interactions
  • Troubleshooting and Understanding

RSS Idea Explorer – Big Pic Explorer

  • Consumption Drop
  • Habitat Loss
  • General Update
  • Responsible Survival
  • Termination
  • Every Day
  • Life and Death
  • Groups
  • Timelines Version 5
  • Multiple Updates

RSS Idea Explorer: Land of Conscience

  • Remember
  • Death Stoppers
  • A Clear Choice
  • Update
  • Projects and Responsibility
  • In Pursuit Of Waste
  • Doubt
  • Remembrance
  • Seeking Miracles
  • Emergence

RSS If You Love This Planet – Helen Caldicott

  • REGISTER TO WATCH: February 19, 2024 7 pm EST webinar Dr. Helen Caldicott and Martin Sheen
  • Steven Starr, Bruce Gagnon and William Hartung at the Dynamics of Possible Nuclear Extinction symposium
  • Dr. Helen Caldicott, Ted Postol, Max Tegmark and Alan Robock at The Dynamics of Possible Nuclear Extinction symposium
  • Dr. Caldicott’s October 2014 speech: The Ukraine Crisis, Is Nuclear Conflict Likely?
  • Dr. Helen Caldicott interviewed by Bob Herbert about her latest book, “Loving This Planet”
  • Best of 2011: Dr. Caldicott’s speech in New Hampshire three weeks after Fukushima
  • Subhankar Banerjee on how corporate resource wars and global warming are decimating native peoples and forests worldwide
  • Marion Pack on the many safety risks at the San Onofre nuclear power plant and how a Fukushima-type meltdown would contaminate Southern California
  • Tom Engelhardt on Washington’s increasing war focus to the exclusion of everything else and its indiscriminate use of drones
  • Holly Barker on the devastating ongoing effects of mid-century U.S. nuclear weapons testing on the Marshall Islands

RSS Indybay Features

  • May Day 2026 Confronts War and Autocracy
  • Juristac is Protected
  • Chevron Outspends All Other Lobbyists in California
  • Mapping California's Factory Farming Industry
  • No Kings, No ICE, No War
  • New Year's Eve Demonstration at California City ICE Detention Facility
  • SF Students Walkout for Massive Anti-ICE Action
  • TPS Hearing Temporarily Stalls Deportations of Haitians
  • ICE Out Everywhere! January 30 National Day Of Action
  • ICE Out of Super Bowl and End the Deportations

RSS Indybay Newswire

  • Activists to Protest Marin Grocer United Markets Over Sale of Chickens from Perdue Factory
  • High School Students Expose Lies About OAK Explansion Plans
  • Historic Boycott of REI to Begin on May 15 Across the Country as New Bargaining Details Revealed
  • 76 Flock Cameras Disabled in the East Bay
  • ‘Bad Blues’ Report Names Six House Democrats Deserving of Primary Challenges
  • If You See These Flyers In The TL/SOMA, Rip Them Down
  • Agent Orange to visit China, hat in hand!
  • Bay Area Communities to Mark 13th Annual Anti-Chevron Day
  • Defend DACA Nurses! Kaiser CNA-NNU Rally In San Francisco To Protest Attack On Nurse
  • Vicente Araque Elvira: revolucionario del FRAP y sacerdote contra el fascismo

RSS Information Clearing House

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RSS Inside Left – The OFFICIAL Anti-Olympics Blog™

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RSS Institute for Public Accuracy

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RSS International Debt Observatory

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RSS io9

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RSS iWatch: Global Muckraking

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RSS Jack Nelson-Pallmeyer Blog

  • Five Things We Need to Know About the “Fiscal Cliff”
  • Wasteful Pentagon Spending and Costly Wars Hurting Minnesota Communities
  • Don’t Forget to Remember: Amnesia about War Costs is Costly
  • Jack Nelson-Pallmeyer Blog # 16:
  • Militarization, MNASAP, Move to Amend, and the Common Good
  • The Three Most Dangerous Words a Soldier Can Hear: “Support Our Troops”
  • Selling War Is Easy: Challenging the Culture of War
  • Tax Day Numbers to Motivate Action for Peace
  • Making Sense of Recent Polls Showing Most Americans Want to End the Afghan War Part Part 1: Why This is Good but not Great News
  • Neil Young, Jackson Browne, and the Insights of Andrew

RSS Jacobin

  • Montreal’s Guillotine Gate Is a Tempest in a Teapot
  • Boys, Beasts, and a Bloated Lord of the Flies
  • Americans: We’re Broke. Donald Trump: No, You’re Not.
  • Nobody Wants Data Centers in Their Backyard
  • Trump’s Deportations of Palestine Activist Students Aren't Over
  • British Fascist Tommy Robinson Is Taking to the Streets Again
  • Philly Wants to Send a Socialist to Congress
  • Gustavo Petro’s Last Push to Phase Out Fossil Fuels
  • Socialism Has a Future. Central Planning Doesn’t.
  • How Mohammed Mossadegh’s Liberal Anti-Imperialism Collapsed

RSS Jeremy Scahill

  • NYC Mayor Smeared a Grandmother as an “Outside Agitator” to Justify NYPD Assault on Columbia
  • New York Times Brass Moves to Stanch Leaks Over Gaza Coverage
  • Leaked NYT Gaza Memo Tells Journalists to Avoid Words “Genocide,” “Ethnic Cleansing,” and “Occupied Territory”
  • “Man-Made Hell On Earth”: A Canadian Doctor on His Medical Mission to Gaza
  • Kibbutz Be’eri Rejects Story in New York Times October 7 Exposé: “They Were Not Sexually Abused”
  • The Story Behind the New York Times October 7 Exposé
  • With Netanyahu Threatening Rafah Invasion, Biden Prepares to Send Israel More Bombs
  • Israel’s Ruthless Propaganda Campaign to Dehumanize Palestinians
  • ICJ Ruling on Gaza Genocide Is a Historic Victory for the Palestinians That Israel Vows to Defy
  • 21 Israeli Troops Killed While Planting Explosives for a Controlled Demolition in Gaza

RSS Jill Stein

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RSS Joe Bageant

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RSS John Cook Video Uploads

  • The Science of Cranky Uncle Part 3: Fighting Misinformation with Critical Thinking
  • The Science of Cranky Uncle Part 2: Inoculation Theory
  • The Science of Cranky Uncle Part 1: Why We Can't Ignore Misinformation
  • Climate misinformation: Will Happer on CO2 being plant food
  • Climate misinformation: David Legates & Willie Soon on CO2 lag
  • Climate misinformation: Marco Rubio on past climate change
  • Climate misinformation: Rick Perry compares climate denial to Galileo
  • Climate misinformation: John Stossel likens climate science to religion
  • Critical Thinking Cafe 2
  • Wishful Thinking about COVID v3

RSS John Hively

  • Supreme Court Fantasy Stories and Their Constitutional Violations
  • The War Over Global Warming is Class Warfare on Many Fronts
  • How the Billionaires Corporate News Media Have Been Used to Brainwash Us
  • Is President Biden Serious About His Infrastructure Package?
  • President Joe Biden and the False Promises of Immigration Reform and Raising the Federal Minimum Wage to $15
  • The Billionaires Have Programmed Too Many of Us Into Opposing Teams
  • When the Dust Clears…the Rich Have Been Redistributing $2.5 trillion Every Year for the Last Twenty-Five Years
  • The Political Games of the Billionaires and Their Political Representatives
  • SW Washington’s Take on the STATE’S Disparity STUDY
  • Why the Electoral College is Allowed to Exist

RSS John Pilger

  • MARK CURTIS PAYS TRIBUTE TO THE JOURNALISM AND FILM-MAKING OF THE LATE JOHN PILGER
  • “A DEEPLY FELT LOVE FOR ORDINARY PEOPLE” – THE WORLD REMEMBERS JOHN PILGER
  • “HE GAVE A VOICE TO THOSE NOT HEARD” – DARTMOUTH FILMS HONOURS JOHN PILGER
  • WE ARE SPARTACUS. ARE WE? THIS MAY BE THE QUESTION OF OUR AGE.
  • THERE IS A WAR COMING SHROUDED IN PROPAGANDA. IT WILL INVOLVE US. SPEAK UP.
  • THE TRUE BETRAYERS OF JULIAN ASSANGE ARE CLOSE TO HOME
  • SILENCING THE LAMBS. HOW PROPAGANDA WORKS.
  • THE US IS ‘CLOSE TO GETTING ITS HANDS ON JULIAN ASSANGE’
  • WAR IN EUROPE AND THE RISE OF RAW PROPAGANDA
  • THE JUDICIAL KIDNAPPING OF JULIAN ASSANGE

RSS John Perkins

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RSS John W. Whitehead

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RSS John Zerzan: Anarchy Radio

  • Anarchy Radio 05 12 2026
  • Piracci, M.: Anarquía Verde. Murray Bookchin frente a John Zerzan, Madrid, 2025.
  • Anarchy Radio 04 28 2026
  • Menjelang Kiamat: Kumpulan Catatan Ekologi, Anarkisme & Kritiknya Terhadap Peradaban
  • Anarchy Radio 04 14 2026
  • john-zerzan-against-civilization
  • Anarchy Radio: Addressing the Public Secret - A Short Documentary on John Zerzan at KWVA
  • Anarchy Radio 03 24 2026
  • Against Civilization- Readings And Reflections (2005) - John Zerzan, Kevin Tucker
  • Anarchy Radio 03 10 2026

RSS Jonathan Turley

  • Yale Medical School Accused of Racial Discrimination in Admissions
  • UCLA Medical School Accused of Racial Discrimination in Defiance of the Supreme Court
  • NYU Students Demand Cancellation of Haidt as Commencement Speaker Over Opposition to DEI and Cancel Culture
  • Democratic Lawyer Marc Elias Raises Power to Eliminate the Virginia Government in Response to the Gerrymandering Decision
  • Northern Ireland Convicts 78-Year-Old Minister for Preaching Near Abortion Clinic
  • “Actions Speak Louder Than Words”: Can Tom Steyer Now Sue Katie Porter for Defamation?
  • Socialist Storytime: AOC Spins Anti-Capitalist Fable About the Founders
  • “You Just Can’t Earn a Billion Dollars”: AOC Declares Billionaires to be a Capitalist Myth
  • Sack and Pack: Law Professor Suggests Extreme Method to Save Virginia Redistricting
  • The Gerrymander Debacle in Virginia Leaves the Democratic Party with a Dangerous Agenda

RSS Karl Grossman

  • I've switched from this site to my website -- www.karlgrossman.com -- for my blog.
  • The End of Police Raids -- at Long Last -- on Gays of Fire Island
  • "Fire Island Was Paradise,Truly Paradise"
  • My First Big Story
  • Disaster Waiting to Happen at Indian Point
  • Zephyr Teachout -- The Most Refreshing Candidate for New York Governor in Decades
  • Science May Be Objective But That Doesn't Mean That All Scientists Are Because of Their Drive to Push Their Institutions and Projects
  • Secret Diablo Canyon Report Revealed
  • Solar Power as an Alternative to Dangerous Nuclear Power in Space
  • The Lyme Disease Epidemic

RSS Karl North Eco-Intelligence

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RSS Kate Ausburn

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RSS Keith Farnish

  • Uprooting Civilization (Part 2)
  • Uprooting Civilization (Part 1)
  • The Problem With…Conspiracy Theories
  • What If…No One Voted?
  • The Problem With…Responsibility
  • An Experiment In Self Liberation
  • Getting Real
  • Finding My Limit
  • What If…We Stopped Using Money
  • Anger Is Good

RSS Knight Science Journalism – MIT

  • The Tracker Now Lives Here …
  • A farewell post: Three reasons why good science writing is worth defending.
  • Globe story on non-invasive prenatal testing offers murky argument.
  • (UPDATED/2*) What Ho? A 2014 List of Lists of best, worst, or otherwisest in 2014
  • Cancer & poverty: When a reporter’s journey becomes part of the story.
  • Malcolm Gladwell faces new charges of using others’ information without attribution.
  • Retraction Watch awarded a two-year, $400,000 grant from the MacArthur Foundation
  • Scientific American reshapes blog network, cuts number of blogs and bloggers in half.
  • The 13 boldest ideas in science: If you wear lipstick and pearls…
  • In the Aftermath of the Holsey Execution: What Courts Say About Drunken Lawyers and Hypothetical Justice.

RSS Kulture Critic

  • In the Folds of the Flesh: Philosophic Reflections on Touch
  • A New World Apocalyptic Eschatology
  • The QAnon Shaman ~ and his Modern Cargo Cult
  • Distraction, Deflection, Diremption
  • A BRAVE ‘NOVEL’ WORLD
  • Myth, Mystery, and Magic: Religious Imagination in Ancient Egypt
  • Patience, A Personal Reflection on Life and Its Impermanence
  • Embodiment, Ecstasy, Emptiness
  • What’s Love Got To Do With It?
  • ‘Putin Did It’ ~ The Russians are Coming

RSS Kunstler Cast

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RSS Kurt Kobb

  • Chinese ag theft, pathogen research only point up dangers of GMO crops and monoculture
  • Will the U. S. curtail oil exports as fuel prices rise?
  • The Iran conflict and our Wile E. Coyote moment
  • Taking a break - no post this week
  • Why most economists vastly underestimate the economic damage of the Iran conflict
  • Martin Act to the rescue: Insider trading on Trump reversals in the legal crosshairs
  • Iran to Trump: If you destroy us, you destroy yourself
  • Is the complacency in global financial markets warranted?
  • Oil price manipulation, an unrecognized stratagem and an unhinged plan
  • Iran war: What we're in for and why logic is your friend

RSS Lack of Environment

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RSS Law and Disorder

  • Law and Disorder May 11, 2026
  • Law and Disorder May 4, 2026
  • Law and Disorder April 27, 2026
  • Law and Disorder April 20, 2026
  • Law and Disorder April 13, 2026
  • Law and Disorder April 6, 2026
  • Law and Disorder March 30, 2026
  • Law and Disorder March 23, 2026
  • Law and Disorder March 16, 2026
  • Law and Disorder March 9, 2026

RSS Le Monde diplomatique – English edition

  • May: the longer view
  • Afghanistan-Pakistan border tensions
  • Strategic and commercial oil reserves
  • Lebanon: where civilisations met and merged
  • At Palmyra, heritage comes before people
  • Anthropic, Silicon Valley's conscience?
  • Vatican weighs in on AI
  • Is Irish reunification back?
  • Tensions rise between Islamabad and Kabul
  • Made in China means made in Yiwu

RSS Le Monde diplomatique – Open Page

  • May: the longer view
  • Afghanistan-Pakistan border tensions
  • Strategic and commercial oil reserves
  • Lebanon: where civilisations met and merged
  • At Palmyra, heritage comes before people
  • Anthropic, Silicon Valley's conscience?
  • Vatican weighs in on AI
  • Is Irish reunification back?
  • Tensions rise between Islamabad and Kabul
  • Made in China means made in Yiwu

RSS Leaving Babylon

  • Even Iran is laughing at us
  • Reaping what you’ve sown
  • From Belarus with love
  • Self-hastened death
  • Requiem for a truly civilized world
  • Pollan’s psychedelic adventure
  • Intentional immiseration
  • Responding to Orlov’s Virtuous Collapse Sequence
  • Farewell to mainstream medicine
  • Dancing through the elder years

RSS Lee Camp

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RSS Lee Fang

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RSS Leonardo Boff

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RSS Les Leopold

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RSS Life Itself

  • Goodness, mostly
  • Light or Darkness?
  • AI and Chaos Forever
  • One Year of War on Ukraine
  • Confessions of a Petroleum Engineer and Ecologist
  • On Snowflakes, Blogs and Loneliness
  • Why the Year 2022 Stood Out?
  • Bad Karma
  • Hope Dies Last
  • Ascent of the Angry and Stupid

RSS Limited, Inc.

  • The "I am" and the 'Happen to be" - a cultural semantics
  • A Modest Proposal: Let AI replace CEOs!
  • A translation of Pierre Herbart's story Miraflores
  • The door of the past
  • On Movies
  • The Rise and Fall of Baby in Popular music: some notes
  • Down in the basement at McDonalds, or why equality of opportunity is a bogus goal
  • On Boyle
  • ON FREE LUNCHES
  • We've been doing this forever: U.S., Israel and Iran, 2007

RSS Link TV – Earth Focus

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RSS Low-Tech Magazine

  • Rediscovering the Handcart
  • Low-tech Magazine: The Uncompressed Book Series
  • Winter is Coming: Build a Solar Powered Foot Stove

RSS LRB Blog

  • ‘Hate Marches’
  • Plague Ships
  • Right of Return
  • Walter Benjamin’s Would-Be Rescuers
  • ‘The Death of Klinghoffer’ in Florence

RSS Luis J. Rodriguez

  • The death of a grandson to fentanyl
  • Updates from Luis J. Rodriguez (Mixcoatl Itztlacuiloh)
  • Help Luis J. Rodriguez become California governor
  • Stand Firm on Election Day
  • 50th Anniversary of Chicano Moratorium Against the Vietnam War
  • Trump's War on the United States
  • Covid-19: The Collective initiation from which something new and vital must be born
  • Class warfare playing out on TV
  • Creativity in a Time of Chaos
  • We are the weave and weaver, we are the dream and dreamer

RSS Mabinogogiblog

  • PREVENTION OF WARS IN 2025
  • 33rd Anniversary of the Murder of Bulic Forsyth
  • An Ecological Approach to the “Meaning of Life” Question
  • JANUARY 2026 WEATHER IN BRITAIN AND MAN-MADE CLIMATE CHANGE
  • LIVING BRUE DAY, MARCH 28th GLASTONBURY TOWN HALL
  • RESOLVING THE WAR IN UKRAINE: MOVING THE IMMOVABLE
  • MP LETTER ABOUT TRUMP’s PLAN TO ANNEXE GREENLAND
  • HOW ONE MAN, VASILY ARKHIPOV, STOPPED A NUCLEAR WAR IN THE CUBAN MISSILE CRISIS
  • MP LETTER ABOUT DEFINING TERRORISM AND ENDING THE BUYING OF POLITICIANS
  • Letter to MP about donations to politicians from (foreign) corporations

RSS Manicore – Accueil

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RSS Marginal Revolution

  • What I’ve been reading
  • Friday assorted links
  • Philosophical Ideas Behind Their Time
  • Christopher Nolan, Straussian?
  • One way to benefit adolescents
  • Meta-papers in science (from my email)
  • MIT fact of the day
  • Thursday assorted links
  • How Much Has Shale Gas Saved U.S. Consumers?
  • The Impact of AI-Generated Text on the Internet

RSS Mark Biskeborn – Underground Essays

  • Kafkaesque
  • Larry Summers Still Living Large
  • War and Corruption Deficits: Insects and Leviathans
  • Breaking News: Lt. Col. Shaffer Accuses Former CIA Dir. Tenet
  • Movie Review: Zero Dark Thirty
  • Wild Sex, Drugs, Howling in the Desert
  • Bradley Manning—A Case of Class-based Justice System
  • Drones Enable Corporate Power
  • Corporations in the U.S. and in Mexico an Inverted Totalitarianism: Devour, Prey, Seduce
  • Rapture of Charlatans

RSS Mark Fiore

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RSS Mark Lynas

  • FAQ on ‘Clean Energy Shift’ – what it is and why it matters
  • Why is the Marine Stewardship Council giving this Norwegian trawler company ‘license to krill’?
  • To help the climate, we need to get positive about energy
  • As we breach 1.5 °C, we must replace temperature limits with clean-energy targets
  • Why we should protect the high seas from all extraction, forever
  • Hope and memory in Hiroshima: A journey from Mount Fuji to global zero
  • This is how to avoid annihilating ourselves in a nuclear war – NewScientist
  • One Nuclear War Can Ruin the Whole Climate – WSJ
  • New book – Six Minutes to Winter: Nuclear War and How to Avoid It
  • Trump wins – but don’t despair

RSS Martin Wolf

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RSS Matt Bruenig

  • My Fully Automated Labor Law Research Tool Is Finally Here
  • What even is an autonomous AI agent?
  • Technical Details of My LLM-Generated Book
  • Some Thoughts on AI
  • The Midwit Theory of Geoff Shullenberger
  • Desert and Capitalism Again
  • Dissecting My Recent Argument (Are Error Theories Offensive?)
  • The Fertility Question
  • Yglesias on the Politics of NAFTA
  • Three Years of Solar Panels Reduced My Electricity Bill $8,935

RSS Matt Taibbi

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RSS Matt Wuerker

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RSS Max Keiser

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RSS Media Lens

  • ‘Starmageddon’ – The Anti-Polanski Smear Campaign That Ate Itself
  • A Lefty Progressive Goes To The Tank Museum
  • Nuclear Genocide – The Threat And The Ceasefire
  • ‘How On Earth Do You Justify That?’ Laura Kuenssberg’s Selective Empathy
  • ‘Operation Epic Fury’ – Anatomy Of A War Of Aggression
  • ‘The Weak Must Suffer’: The Eternal Fiction Of The ‘International Rules-Based Order’
  • Venezuela – ‘War Is Peace’
  • Blanked – A Tale Of Two Books
  • The Magic Begging Bowl, Part 2 – Self-Inquiry
  • The Magic Begging Bowl, Part 1 – The Failure Of Success

RSS Media Matters – Environment

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RSS Media Matters – Everything

  • Fox guest on possible troop withdrawal from Afghanistan: "The solution is more blood, sweat, and tears" 
  • Fox host defends Trump: "Just because you use harsh language doesn't mean your intent is to denigrate another race"
  • Fox News is talking more about abortion than the Democratic debates did
  • Fox & Friends touts Trump's "connections to Ohio" without noting they involve housing discrimination
  • The only Black Republican in the House announced he will not seek reelection. Fox News covered it for 20 seconds.
  • Fox's Newt Gingrich complains about Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren: "I don't remember us electing an angry president literally in my lifetime"
  • Fox's Stuart Varney: Electing a Democrat as president will lead to an economic contraction
  • New Bureau of Land Management head complained that federal employees aren’t held “personally responsible for the harm that they do”
  • Sean Hannity says one of his main criticisms of Republicans is that they aren't more like Rush Limbaugh
  • On Fox, Rush Limbaugh complains about efforts to address the climate crisis: "There is no man-made climate change"

RSS Media Roots

  • Media Roots Radio: Ep 5: the Acid Drought, Making DMT, A Godfather of Psychedelic Analogs & His Problem Child 2-C-T-7
  • Media Roots Radio: Uniquely American Mass Murders, ‘Officer Safety’, Anti-LGBTQ Strategy of Tension & AI as Art
  • Media Roots Radio: Ep 2: How Raves Brought Back the Psychedelic Subculture, DanceSafe, Pill Tests & the DEA vs MDMA
  • Media Roots Radio: Ep 1: A Brief History of Hallucinogens, MK-Ultra, the CIA, LSD, Leary & the Psychedelic 60s/70s
  • Media Roots Radio: UNLOCKED: the Smallpox Doomsday Failsafe Scenario, 100s of Tons of Virus ‘Missing’ Pt 2

RSS Methane Hydrates

  • Joint New Zealand - German 3D survey reveals massive seabed gas hydrate and methane system
  • Noctilucent clouds: further confirmation of large methane releases
  • Earthquake M6.7 hits Sea of Okhotsk
  • Methanetracker
  • Sea of Okhotsk
  • High daily peak methane readings continue over Antarctica
  • Is Global Warming breaking up the Integrity of the Permafrost?
  • Antarctic methane peaks at 2249 ppb
  • Methane hydrates
  • Message to the Survivors

RSS Michael Hudson

  • Did Xi Really Trade Iran for Taiwan?
  • Swap Lines, Gulf Debt and the Unravelling of Dollar Primacy
  • Wars Are Won by Economics, Not Armies
  • The Return of Guns and Butter as War Spending Surges
  • How Iran Turned Oil Into the Empire’s Weak Point
  • Wall Street’s Exit Plan Is You
  • The Ponzi Economy Is Breaking
  • Hormuz Is Leverage
  • Strait Power
  • The End of Stable Energy

RSS Michael Miller – Viewpoint

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RSS Michael Parenti

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RSS Mike Philbin – Free Planet

  • PROJECT PERPETUA: 2026 modern concept car
  • SERIAL KILLER: a new Hertzan Chimera novel for 2026?
  • MADELINE SOTO: missing persons case
  • FLINT: a new Hertzan Chimera novel... coming in 2025
  • STAR CITIZEN - HALF A BILLION DOLLARS - TEN YEARS AND COUNTING
  • ELECTRO-BULLET: reinterpreting a classic...
  • LAST OF THE CATHEDRA available in trade paperback from Amazon.
  • OUR ELECTRIC MOON
  • Best Real-time in-game Physics engine EVER by Dennis Gustafsson
  • AMAZING WARHAMMER 40K ASTARTES SHORTS

RSS Mondoweiss

  • ‘They said, find yourselves another home’: Israeli soldiers threaten residents of West Bank refugee camps with displacement
  • There is a long history of members of Congress calling out Israel’s nuclear arsenal. It is now time to take action.
  • Gaza elders who survived the Nakba reflect on being displaced by Israel again, 78 years later
  • Inside the historic crossroads facing the Fatah movement
  • Synagogues that sell stolen Palestinian land should, of course, be protested
  • The EU has finally agreed to sanction violent Israeli settlers, but critics say the measures do not go nearly far enough
  • American Jews begin to chart a future without Zionism in the wake of the Gaza genocide
  • Abdul El-Sayed’s historic Senate run builds on Palestine’s rich legacy in Michigan politics
  • Catch a rat, get paid: inside the grassroots campaign against Gaza’s rat epidemic
  • ’60 Minutes’ offers no pushback to Netanyahu’s barrage of lies as Israeli leader attempts to bolster support for failing Iran war

RSS Mons Angelorum: Deadly Serious 3

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RSS Mons Angelorum: Waiting for Good Weather

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RSS Mother Jones

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RSS MR Zine

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RSS Musings on Iraq

  • Review Mahdi Obeidi and Kurt Pitzer, The Bomb In My Garden, The Secrets Of Saddam’s Nuclear Mastermind, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2004
  • This Day In Iraqi History - May 15 Iraqi army attacked Israel in 1948 Arab-Israeli War
  • This Day In Iraqi History - May 14 Pres Bakr brought Communists into National Front govt to co-opt Baath’s largest opponent
  • Iraq Finds Itself Caught Between The US and Iran Over Forming The Next Government
  • This Day In Iraqi History - May 13 German planes attacked UK forces at Habaniya air base Anglo-Iraq War
  • This Day In Iraqi History - May 12 Sec State Albright said if 500,000 Iraqi children died under sanctions would be worth it to contain Saddam
  • US Expects Action From Iraq Against Pro-Iran Resistance Not Words
  • This Day In Iraqi History - May 11 2nd time Sec Def Rumsfeld claimed roughly 10,000 troops could invade Iraq and overthrow Saddam
  • This Day In Iraqi History - May 10 Army forced PM Talib to resign Pres Arif became PM
  • This Day In Iraqi History - May 9 German and Italian planes started landing in Iraq for Anglo-Iraq War

RSS Nafeez Ahmed

  • IDF's Gaza assault is to control Palestinian gas, avert Israeli energy crisis | Nafeez Ahmed
  • World Bank and UN carbon offset scheme 'complicit' in genocidal land grabs - NGOs | Nafeez Ahmed
  • The open source revolution is coming and it will conquer the 1% - ex CIA spy | Nafeez Ahmed
  • Iraq blowback: Isis rise manufactured by insatiable oil addiction
  • Defence officials prepare to fight the poor, activists and minorities (and commies) | Nafeez Ahmed
  • Pentagon preparing for mass civil breakdown | Nafeez Ahmed
  • The inevitable demise of the fossil fuel empire | Nafeez Ahmed
  • US shale boom is over, energy revolution needed to avert blackouts | Nafeez Ahmed
  • Scientists vindicate 1972 'Limits to Growth' – urge investment in 'circular economy' | Nafeez Ahmed
  • Exhaustion of cheap mineral resources is terraforming Earth – scientific report | Nafeez Ahmed

RSS Naked Capitalism

  • Coffee Break: Scientists and the Growth Economy, Sternly Worded Letters, Scientist Runs Afoul of RFKJr, Timothy Snyder with the Editor of Science, and Wither Food
  • South Korea Will Remain a Key Part of the US’ Chinese Containment Plans
  • Links 5/15/2026
  • Washington Is Closer Than Ever to Pulling Off Its 66-Year Dream of Regime Change in Cuba
  • Iran War: Trump in China, Ship Seized in the Strait, War Powers Vote Comes This Close, Saudis Make Peaceward Moves
  • Ready or Not, AI Government is Already Here
  • Spanish Politics Take the International Stage: Pedro Sanchez vs. Isabel Ayuso
  • Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa: How They Stack Up on Reusing Waste
  • Links 5/14/2026
  • Iran War: Tanker War Lite as Trump Comes Even More Unglued and Real Economy Damage Becomes More Visible

RSS Naomi Klein

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RSS Naomi Klein – Guardian.UK

  • Alaa Abd el-Fattah’s tweets were wrong, but he is no ‘anti-white Islamist’. Why does the British right want you to believe he is? | Naomi Klein
  • Wealth and power shape the climate emergency – the most important tool we have to defend ourselves is the facts | Naomi Klein
  • The rise of end times fascism | Naomi Klein and Astra Taylor
  • Night of bombing in south Beirut – as it happened
  • How Israel has made trauma a weapon of war
  • We need an exodus from Zionism | Naomi Klein
  • The Zone of Interest is about the danger of ignoring atrocities – including in Gaza | Naomi Klein
  • We have a tool to stop Israel’s war crimes: BDS – podcast
  • We have a tool to stop Israel's war crimes: BDS | Naomi Klein
  • This Giving Tuesday, support the publication that sees news as a right for all | Naomi Klein

RSS Nature Protects, As She is Protected

  • No Name Calling Please, Give Us Evidence Which Proves GM Crops Are Safe
  • Let’s Be Honest About Genetically Modified Crops
  • Hindu roots of modern ‘ecology’
  • Ancient wisdom for a contemporary problem
  • By trashing the Gadgil report recommendations, did we just kill the Western Ghats?
  • GM crops debate needs Swadeshi voice
  • GM food crops – Why India must say no
  • GMOs are uneeded and unsafe - says India's largest farmer union
  • And all is not lost
  • Up and up and up

RSS Navdanya’s Diary

  • Food for health: the right to health is to live healthy lives
  • Making peace with the Earth. 600 organisations urge a sustainable new start
  • The Seed War
  • An Agroecological Transformation to Tackle Climate Change
  • Rewilding food, rewilding farming
  • Which future of food do we want?
  • Vandana Shiva : No to Junk Food in Schools, Yes to Climate Change Education in Schools
  • Education and knowledge can stop the fake “science” of multinationals that is leading the planet and society to collapse
  • We Need Biodiversity-Based Agriculture to Solve the Climate Crisis
  • Industrial Agriculture, based on War Technologies, continues to kill millions of species driving the sixth mass extinction: Agroecology is the Future

RSS New Internationalist

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RSS New Left Project

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RSS New World Notes

  • Observations on Work
  • The GOP and the Dems: Hypocrisy and Betrayal
  • Can Technology Save Us?
  • George Carlin at the National Press Club
  • Bitter Lake
  • How to Ruin an Economy
  • Killing Us Softly
  • Confronting the Authorities
  • Peasant of the Dawn
  • Police

RSS News Junkie Post

  • Mayotte Crisis: Putrid Leftover of France’s Imperialist and Colonialist Scrooge?
  • China, Russia and India Versus USA, EU and Japan: Axes Powers of a New Global Cold War?
  • French Radical Protests: Can the Sinister Fascist Traits of Capitalism be Overcome?
  • Qu’est donc la memoire?
  • The Stench of Extinction
  • Forget Wars on Covid and Terror: War on Climate Collapse Is the Only War of Necessity for Human Survival
  • Covid Fear Management Policies: Distractions from and Tests for Looming Climate Collapse
  • France Neoliberal Macron: Vanguard of a Covid Global Corporate Dictatorship?
  • Magic Woman of Haiti’s Mountains
  • Afghanistan War Outcome: Hope for Sovereign Nations Fighting the Scourge of Neocolonial Imperialism

RSS NOAA: Monthly State of the Climate Report

  • April 2026 Monthly National Climate Report
  • April 2026 Monthly Global Climate Report
  • April 2026 Monthly Regional Analysis
  • April 2026 Monthly Upper Air Report
  • April 2026 Monthly Tropical Cyclones Report
  • April 2026 Monthly Global Snow and Ice Report
  • April 2026 Monthly Wildfires Report
  • March 2026 Global Drought Narrative
  • March 2026 Monthly Tornadoes Report
  • March 2026 Monthly Synoptic Discussion

RSS Notes from the Aboveground

  • On Inequality
  • Shameless is as shameless does
  • Wages of Rebellion
  • Seveneves
  • Guns across America
  • How to Clone a Mammoth
  • Madness in Civilization
  • Post-TV
  • Thieves of State
  • Protecting the Wild

RSS NYT Examiner

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RSS Occupy.com

  • Donald Trump Fits the Bill for the Biblical Antichrist
  • Reconsidering Our Planet, Part III
  • A 3-Step Blueprint Democrats Can Follow to Win in 2028 and Beyond
  • Fighting the Corporations that are Killing Our Planet, Part II
  • Democrats' Last Major Obstacle to Defeating MAGA for Good
  • The Struggle to Keep a Living Planet
  • Can the UK Green Party Surge Match Mamdani’s NYC Earthquake?
  • Minneapolis Is Giving Americans the Model for Fighting a Fascist Regime
  • Hegseth's Alleged War Crime Is the Exact Illegal Order the 6 Democrats Warned Us About
  • 2025 Elections Could Be the Beginning of the End of MAGA — if Dems Seize the Opportunity

RSS Occupy las Vegas

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RSS Occupy Wall Street

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RSS Oddity Central

  • China’s ‘Ageless Actor’ Is 40 Years Old, Doesn’t Look a Day Over 12
  • Unique Russian Eatery Only Serves the Simplest Sandwiches Imaginable for
  • Biblical Diet Trend Takes Healthy Eating to a Whole New Level
  • Jibachi Senbei – Japan’s Unique Wasp-Infused Crackers
  • The High Skull – China’s Bizarre Beauty Trend Has People Changing the Shape of Their Head
  • All-You-Can-Eat Restaurant Implements ‘Vomit Fee’ to Prevent Greedy Patrons from Overeating
  • Robotics Company Unveils World’s First Production-Ready Manned Transformable Mecha
  • Illegally Riding the Famous ‘Iron Ore Train’ Through the Sahara Desert – A Unique Dune-Like Experience
  • Experts Warn About Fingerprint Theft from Popular ‘V’ Hand Gesture in Selfies
  • Russian Men Are Allegedly Getting ‘Cauliflower Ear’ Procedures to Look Like MMA Fighters

RSS Of Two Minds

  • Chaos Unleashed: When "Irrational" Makes Perfect Sense
  • When US Treasuries Play a Reverse Card
  • What Would Be Truly Bullish? Actually Fixing What's Broken
  • Recession and Revolution: Our Experience Isn't a Model or System
  • Why We're Helpless When Things Break Down
  • AI, Money, Human Nature and the Problem with Problems
  • Sex, Money and Demographics
  • Mercantilism: China and Beyond
  • When the Cost of Truth Is High, We--and AI--Lie
  • The Questions Nobody Asks as AI Replaces Human Workers

RSS One Penny Sheet

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RSS One Struggle – South Florida

  • Toys on the Dash and Cops at the Vigil
  • Beyond the Headlines: Issue #2
  • Organize Against Alligator Alcatraz!
  • “No Kings Day 2025”: Your discontent shouldn’t end at a protest
  • Solidarity and Support for Haiti in 2025
  • Beyond the Headlines: Issue #1
  • Beyond the Headlines:
  • GANG VIOLENCE, CHAOS IN HAITI – WHY?
  • Don’t Fall for Capitalist Slick Talk About “Community Redevelopment”
  • Our taxes are funding war and a genocide!

RSS Orion Magazine

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RSS Our Finite World

  • China and US Trade Talks: A Solution for Oil Shortages?
  • Losing the Iran War May Be the Best Outcome for the World
  • A New Explanation for Tariffs and Bombings
  • Understanding Deglobalization: The Role of Diesel and Jet Fuel
  • 2026: Expect a very uneven world economic downturn
  • Too many promises; too few future physical goods
  • A lack of very cheap oil is leading to debt problems
  • What has gone wrong with the economy? Can it be fixed?
  • Sierra Club talk that may be of interest
  • Why oil prices don’t rise to consistently high levels

RSS Pando Daily

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RSS PBD – Progressive Blog Digest

  • 46
  • HIS LEGACY
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RSS PeakOil.com News

  • Why the IEA is Wrong About Peak Oil Demand
  • Did we inadvertently speed global warming?
  • Venezuela’s Oil Monopoly Eases
  • Why Germany is Choosing Natural Gas Over Nuclear Power
  • U.S. coal-fired electricity generation decreased in 2022 and 2023
  • Is It Time To Abandon the Idea of Phasing Out Oil and Gas?
  • More than 20% of global refining capacity at risk of closure
  • Charles Hugh Smith Blog: Fire, Then Ice Our Deflationary Future
  • Saudi Aramco CEO Amin Nasser says energy transition strategy ‘visibly failing’
  • 100 million-degree ‘artificial sun’ sets new records in hunt for energy’s ‘Holy Grail’

RSS Peak Prosperity Blog

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RSS Peak Prosperity: Daily Digest

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RSS Peak Prosperity: Featured Voices

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RSS People Before Profit Blog

  • "Blacklisted Again" Michael Berkowitz on "Trumbo" by Norman Markowitz
  • A Corrected and Updated Version of The "Madness" of Donald Trump by Norman Markowitz
  • The "Madness" of Donald Trump by Norman Markowitz
  • Robert Parry's Constructive Criticism for both the Obama Administration and the Center Left by Norman Markowitz
  • A Marxist IQ for December by Norman Markowitz
  • A Wake Up Call for those in Labor and the Left who Who Wait for Hillary Clinton by Norman Markowitz
  • A Powerfful Isreali Critique of the Concept of "International Terrorism" and Wars without End Against it by Norman Markowitz
  • A Corrected Version and Updated Version of "The Missiles of November" by Norman Markowitz
  • The "Missiles of November" by Norman Markowitz
  • The Ontario Federation of Labor Speaks Out in International Terrorism by Norman Markowitz

RSS Phlegm

  • "we fight each other while it devours us" Belgium June 2017
  • West Didsbury Manchester. May 2017
  • Dulwich picture gallery. April 25th 2017
  • Ostend, Belgium April 2017
  • Jacksonville, Florida - USA
  • Sheffield - UK
  • Lexington, Kentucky - USA.
  • Reykjavik - Iceland
  • Toronto - Canada.
  • Birmingham, UK.

RSS Phyllis Bennis

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RSS Physicist-Retired Newsvine

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RSS Pink Tank

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RSS PlanetSave – Climate

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RSS Political Violence @ a Glance

  • A Fond Farewell to Political Violence @ A Glance
  • Sudan’s Junta Chief Survived the Coup, but Can He Win the War?
  • The Limits of Plausible Deniability in Ukraine and Beyond
  • The Responsibility to Protect Palestinians
  • Ecuador Has 99 Problems but a Coup Isn’t One
  • How Economic Crises Make Incumbent Leaders Change Their Regimes from Within
  • Do No Harm: US Aid to Africa and Civilian Security
  • Perceptions in Northern Ireland: 25 Years After the Good Friday Agreement
  • Viewpoint: Is Military Aid Really the Best Way to Help Ukraine?
  • Beyond Victimhood: Women’s Contributions to Criminal Violence

RSS Popular Resistance

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RSS PRN with Danny Schechter

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RSS Progressive Radio Network

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RSS ProPublica

  • Why Have Immigration Agents Detained This American Citizen Three Times?
  • In a Private Meeting, Colorado Marijuana Regulators Acknowledge the Extent of Illegal Hemp Sales
  • At 17, He Was Tear-Gassed at Selma. At 78, He’s Watching Kids Tear-Gassed During Trump’s Deportation Campaign.
  • Counterterrorism Czar’s Blueprint Targets Leftists, Ignores Far-Right Violence and Heaps Praise on Trump
  • A Unique Oregon Law Allows It to Block Healthcare Deals. In Five Years, the State Hasn’t Done So Once.
  • Immigrants Detained in Chicago Military-Style Raid Seek Millions in Damages
  • A Noncitizen Says She Was Told She Could Vote. Then Customs Detained Her at the Airport and Threatened to Deport Her.
  • He Was Fired for Sexually Harassing Students. California Allowed Him to Keep Teaching Anyway.
  • Help Us Report on Teacher Misconduct in California
  • A U.S. Senate Candidate Says Foreign Truckers Are Making America’s Roads Unsafe. His Own Truckers Have Caused Harm.

RSS Project Censored

  • Stephen Miller Owned Up to $250,000 in Palantir Stock at Time of ICE Contract
  • US Government Plans AI-Driven Production of Mass Propaganda
  • Military Expansion Threatens Pacific’s Coral Reefs
  • Bulgarian Hackers Use Trending AI Site to Conduct Phishing Scam
  • Journalists Targeted for Covering ICE Operations
  • FAA Moves to Criminalize Use of Drones to Track ICE
  • Midterms Heighten Need for Social Media Regulation
  • Investigation Reveals ICE Surveillance of School Cameras
  • Public Largely Unaware of Third-Party External Review Process for Denied Healthcare Claims
  • Children of Missouri Death Row Inmates Share Stories of Loss, Stigma, and Resilience

RSS Public Intelligence

  • 2025 Bilderberg Meeting Participant List
  • U.S. Senate Homeland Security Committee Interim Report on July 13th, 2024 Trump Assassination Attempt
  • Joint Chiefs of Global Tax Enforcement Crypto Assets Risk Indicators for Financial Institutions
  • 2024 Bilderberg Meeting Participant List
  • U.S. House Financial Surveillance Report: How Federal Law Enforcement Commandeered Financial Institutions to Spy on Americans
  • Asymmetric Warfare Group Iran Quick Reference Guide
  • (U//FOUO) FBI Domestic Terrorism Reference Guide: Sovereign Citizen Violent Extremism
  • Department of Justice Critical Incident Review Active Shooter at Robb Elementary School
  • Virginia Guiffre v. Ghislaine Maxwell Unsealed Jeffrey Epstein Documents Batch 8 January 9, 2024
  • Virginia Guiffre v. Ghislaine Maxwell Unsealed Jeffrey Epstein Documents Batch 7 January 8, 2024

RSS Pulse

  • How Gaza has changed the narrative on global Jihad
  • Universal Jurisdiction in Islam
  • Rachid Ghannouchi’s letter from a Tunisian Prison
  • ILAN PAPPE : There is still time to stop the Gaza genocide
  • From the Israel-Palestine Memory Hole
  • Scotland First Minister’s family stuck in Gaza
  • maiñ Burhan hūñ
  • A Protest for Ukraine free of Dogma and Cynicism
  • Dismantling Hindutva with Islamophobia?
  • Of UnStating the Stated, and the Silences in its Wake

RSS Quartz

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RSS Rabett Run

  • Bad (and the few ok) population decline arguments
  • The Mikes have the Willies
  • Just why are people doing the thing that I said they should do?
  • Elon believes in half of "Fake It Til You Make It"
  • Dispatchable Hydropower For The Win! (Just Don't Call It That)
  • Alex Tabarrock and Argumentum ad Flubberum
  • Brian's new gig
  • Something left unsaid about Koutsoyiannis et al.
  • "A Left That Refuses to Condemn Mass Murder Is Doomed"
  • Well, crud

RSS Rabble.Ca

  • Don’t buy-in to climate science denialism
  • UCP set to announce plan to bust up AHS
  • Deepfakes and gender based violence
  • City of Vancouver to lowest paid workers: Let them eat cuts!
  • Hundreds of thousands of Quebec public sector workers vow further strike action
  • Dual boss battle: video game workers face-off multiple employers at once
  • Degrowth, green energy, social equity, and circular economy
  • Take Back Alberta completes take over of UCP board
  • Saving Palestinian lives will save Israeli lives
  • Edmonton activist protests climate crisis with demonstration in AB legislature

RSS Radical Philosophy

  • Embodied phantasm
  • Saint-Alban’s contested legacy
  • Frantz Fanon at Saint-Alban
  • The space of ideology
  • The actually existing ‘state of Palestine’
  • Breaking out of the circle
  • On the bourgeois concept of real abstraction
  • Phenomenology of necessary illusion
  • Reproductive subsumption
  • The fascistisation of social reproduction

RSS Ran Prieur

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RSS Random Communications from an Evolutionary Edge

  • New forms of radical local action
  • A Transformational Book That Was Missing — Until Now
  • A Glimpse Into the Emergence of My Work and the Shape of My Current Life
  • Expanding democratic genius into collective wisdom (Part 2)
  • PS: Attunement as a source of wisdom
  • Expanding democratic genius into collective wisdom (Part 1)
  • A celebration of my favorite Taoist visionary evocateur of participatory deliberative democracy, Audrey Tang
  • Weaving Greater Intelligences Together
  • 3 Chatbots on Regenerativity – Scenarios, Examples & Future Prompts – Rounds 8-9 (Artificial Super-Intelligence Part 11)
  • 3 Chatbots on Regenerativity – More blind spots & Aikido moves – Round 7 (Artificial Super-Intelligence Part 10)

RSS RANTINGS ON MARKETS, ECONOMICS AND BUSINESS STRATEGY

  • Update On The Crisis Of Capitalism That The System Doesn’t Want You To See
  • France’s Sunday Presidential Election Looms Large
  • 2022 – A World Where Everything Is On The Brink
  • The Power Elite, The World Of Men, And A Simple Litmus Test To Determine When They Will Be Defeated
  • Is The CIA Involved In The Origins Of The Coronavirus?
  • Buckle Up For What May Possibly Be A 2022 Social And Economic Shit Show
  • The Trump Administration And CIA Talked Of Murdering Julian Assange… And More
  • Newly “Discovered” And Potentially Damning Documents On US Funding Of Coronavirus Research
  • Now We Will See America’s True Soul
  • The Best Video I’ve Ever Watched On Why The US Is Really In Afghanistan- Pathological Plunder

RSS Read the Science

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RSS Reader Supported News

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RSS Reader Supported News – Posts

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RSS Real Economics

  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – May 10, 2026
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – May 03, 2026
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – April 26, 2026
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – April 19, 2026
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – April 12, 2026
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – April 05, 2026
  • Trump's tariffs will fail because USA is no longer a republic, but an oligarchy - NOTES
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – March 29, 2026
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – March 22, 2026
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – March 14, 2026

RSS Real-World Economics Review Blog

  • How economics became a religion
  • What is to be done?
  • Robert Solow kicking Lucas and Sargent in the pants
  • AI productivity boom and shorter workweeks
  • Will gravity pull down the AI bubble?
  • Why we are heading for another financial crash
  • Private wealth as a percent of domestic product 1980 – 2025
  • We don’t need billionaires, and we can structure the market so we don’t have them
  • Rational expectations — a fallacy that matters for economics
  • From war on Iran to the war on Crypto: the secret weapon is a Digital Currency

RSS Red Pepper

  • Grace Byron on cultural criticism, transphobia and Trump
  • Behind the ‘intelligent’ chatbot
  • Theatre and political transformations in Brazil
  • Elections 2026: Immigration, employment and the limits of Holyrood
  • Their hour of glory: Trades councils and the 1926 general strike
  • Elections 2026: Soul searching for Scottish political identity
  • Key words: Conjuncture
  • Elections 2026: The left’s future is local
  • Elections 2026: Think global, vote local
  • Teaching in and against the state

RSS Reddit: Environment

  • Harrison Ford Laments 'Real Mess' His Generation Has Left Young People In Emotional Graduation Speech—And He's Absolutely Right
  • Justice Alito pushes back on calls to recuse in a major Supreme Court climate case
  • Ban private jets and cut speed limits to avert UK fuel crisis, say campaigners
  • Lead in the air! - Another reason why this rise in wood burning is backwards
  • Trump administration aims to roll back limits on toxic wastewater from coal-fired power plants
  • Louisiana parish president sparks free speech fight after shutting down ‘Cancer Alley’ film screening
  • While the U.S. Doubles Down on Fossil Fuels, Other Countries Are Charting a Path Away From Them: The recent Santa Marta conference in Colombia was the world’s first diplomatic conference expressly dedicated to phasing out fossil fuels.
  • Jimmy Carter's solar farm is still powering his hometown and his legacy
  • People Usually Get Away With Harming Hawai‘i’s Seals Despite Tourist Case: A Seattle visitor was arrested a week after lobbing a rock at an endangered seal on Maui. But cases involving people killing the seals are rarely prosecuted.
  • Environmentalists rally around endangered fish as EGLE takes comment on Copperwood Mine permit

RSS Reddit: Overpopulation – Unending Growth

  • Advocating for murder, eugenics, or culling people does not help make recognition of overpopulation more mainstream.
  • r/overpopulation open discussion thread
  • Pakistan proposes linking provincial funding to population control amid 390 million projection by 2050
  • The image of South Korea as a symbol of ultra-low birth rates must now disappear.
  • Africa, Arab countries, and the "Stan" countries continue to have high fertility rates, which will fuel population growth of the future
  • Isaac Asimov articulated the problem with overpopulation the best in 1988
  • Iraq faces demographic challenge: Population estimated to reach 73M by 2050
  • [South Korea] April birth registrations surge +17%
  • One of the most common fears of children in 1966: overpopulation
  • China recorded 7.92 million births in 2025 — fewer than in 1939 during wartime, with a current population more than double that era

RSS Republic of Lakotah – Mitakuye Oyasin

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RSS Resilience.org

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RSS Richard Heinberg

  • Museletter #397: The 2026 Energy Crisis and Our Wile E. Coyote Moment
  • Museletter #396: The Future of Forests
  • Museletter #395: The Empire Crumbles
  • Museletter #394: Nourishing the Bioregional Economy
  • Museletter #393: Electricity Price Squeeze: Something’s Going to Give
  • Museletter #392: What Futures Are Possible?
  • Museletter #391: Gratitude in the Great Unraveling
  • Museletter #390: Peak Oil for Gen Z
  • Museletter #389: Bioregioning Is Our Future
  • Museletter #388: Let’s (Not) Choose Sides and Fight

RSS Robert Koehler

  • Make America Racist Again
  • United Humanity: A Future Beyond War
  • Where Does Indifference to Life Begin?
  • Do You Believe in Them Yet?
  • Sanctuary Cities and International Security
  • This Old House . . .
  • Earth Day Is the Planet’s Future
  • There’s No Real Future Without Empathy
  • Everything That Doesn’t Matter
  • A Little Mix of Money, Poetry and God

RSS Robert Kuttner

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RSS Robert Lindsay

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RSS Robert Scheer

  • The Ballot and the Bullet
  • The Yellowstone Club and the Reshaping of America’s Public Lands
  • The Plot to Turn Back the Clock on Women’s Rights
  • The Soul of W.E.B. Du Bois
  • A Darkness in the East
  • As Tick Bites Surge, Conspiracy Theories Follow
  • What You Should Know About the CEOs Traveling to China With Trump
  • Democrats Against Detente
  • Gangs, Drones and US Warships Besiege Haiti
  • State Laws Are ‘Leveraging Criminalization as a Tactic Against Trans People’

RSS Robert Scribbler

  • OBX Wave Report July 6 — 1-2 Foot, Waves Likely to Build a Bit Friday and Saturday
  • The OBX Wave Report July 5 — 1-2 Foot With Some Shark Bumps Reported
  • OBX Wave Report July 4th — Celebrating Freedom in the 2 Foot Surf
  • OBX Wave Report July 3 — 2 Foot, Clean, Hot Weather
  • OBX Wave Report July 2 — 2-3 Foot With Little Barrels + Talking Climate Crisis
  • OBX Wave Report June 30 — 2-4 Foot Friday For Future + Record Global Heat
  • OBX Wave Report June 29 — Gorgeous Green 2-3 Footers With Light Northeast Winds
  • OBX Wave Report June 28 — 2-3 Foot and Semi-Clean
  • OBX Wave Report June 27 — 1-3 Foot and Cleaning Up Through Afternoon
  • OBX Wave Report June 26 — 1-3 Foot and Choppy With Strong Southerly Winds

RSS Rogue Columnist

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RSS RollingStone: Politics

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RSS RT: Documentary

  • Free to be yourself. Surf master & disabled pupil inspire each other (Trailer) Premiere 02/23
  • Beauty and the Bleach. Skin-whitening trend ravages Senegalese women
  • A gastronomic odyssey through St. Pete’s literary haunts – Taste of Russia Ep. 17
  • Beauty and the Bleach.Skin-whitening trend ravages Senegalese women (Trailer) Premiere 02/19
  • Of Ice and Fame. Medvedeva v Zagitova: friends off the ice, rivals on it
  • Is this a yolk? Ostrich omelettes & peculiar pastries - Taste of Russia Ep. 16
  • Champions of the spirit. Unknown stories of 1st Soviet Olympic medalists
  • Of Ice and Fame. Medvedeva v Zagitova: friends off the ice, rivals on it (Trailer) Premiere 02/10
  • Champions of the spirit. Unknown stories of 1st Soviet Olympic medalists (Trailer) Premiere 02/09
  • Art at the Stake. Afghan artists risk lives to return style, music, and culture to their country

RSS RT Today

  • Russia to expand Islamic banking rollout
  • Israel and Lebanon extend truce amid airstrikes, Hezbollah attacks
  • Trump backs ‘status quo’ on Taiwan – US envoy to United Nations
  • Boeing ordered to pay $49.5 million to family of 737 MAX crash victim
  • A decade of lies: The US-funded biolab denial saga
  • What did Trump and Xi achieve in Beijing?
  • India can mediate between Iran and Arab countries – Lavrov
  • Potato futures are soaring – should the world be worried?
  • Removing Iran’s uranium mostly about ‘PR’ – Trump
  • Yale medical school discriminates against Whites, Asians – DOJ

RSS RT: USA News

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RSS Sail Transport Network

  • We Did It: Sailing Cargo in the Aegean
  • Cure for Depending on 90K Oil Spewing Cargo Ships: Sail Power Makes Inroads, Now in Mediterranean
  • Dirty Fossil Fuel ‘Business-As-Usual’ Tactics Spew Out of the IMO at COP22
  • Noah’s Ark Gone Awry
  • Good News/Bad News for Consumers in an Increasingly Energy-Challenged, Shipping-Dependent World
  • Sail cargo's imminent achievement: Timbercoast's Steel Schooner, the Avontuur
  • COP21 Follow-up for Sail Transport and Its Fight against Shipping Emissions and for Resilience
  • Shipping Emissions Must Be Tackled at COP21 with Advances such as Sail Power
  • Maine Sail Freight — America Gets Serious about Clean, Renewable Energy for Transport
  • The Tres Hombres Ship is Homeward Bound

RSS Science-Based Life

  • Sciencey Stuff You May Have Missed: Week 22
  • Sciencey Stuff You May Have Missed: Week 21
  • Sciencey Stuff You May Have Missed: Week 20
  • Sciencey Stuff You May Have Missed: Week 19
  • Sciencey Stuff You May Have Missed: Week 18
  • Sciencey Stuff You May Have Missed: Weeks 16 & 17
  • Science Stuff You May Have Missed: Week 15
  • Sciencey Stuff You May Have Missed: Week 14
  • Sciencey Stuff You May Have Missed: Week 13
  • Sciencey Stuff You May Have Missed: Week 12

RSS ScienceDaily: Top Environment News

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RSS ScienceDaily: Top Science News

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RSS Scrap Weapons

  • Conceptualising a COP for Weapons
  • When Deterrence Meets Climate Catastrophe: Rethinking Nuclear Risk in a Post-Treaty World
  • Arms and Arguments April 2026 Review
  • Arms and Arguments March 2026 Review
  • Arms and Arguments February 2026 Review
  • Arms and Arguments January 2026 Reviews
  • The New START Treaty and Nuclear Winter: Re-centering Global Risk in Arms Control Debates
  • Prioritizing Weapons and Ammunition Management Ahead of the 2026 Somalia Transition
  • Who Decides the Future? Intergenerational Perspectives on Disarmament
  • ‘A House of Dynamite’ is a great film, which gets nuclear security dangerously wrong. Why does that matter?

RSS Seemorerocks

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RSS Shadow Government Statistics

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RSS Shame Project

  • Wall Street Journal Issues Epic Correction On Radley Balko’s Error-Riddled Reporting
  • Malcolm Gladwell’s “David & Goliath” Asks Us To Pity the Rich
  • Radley Balko: Anatomy of a “Stand Your Ground” Shill
  • Radley Balko
  • Radley Balko: Anatomy of a “Stand Your Ground” Shill
  • NPR’s Education Coverage Funded By Pro-Privatization Billionaires
  • Charles Murray
  • Why is Malcolm Gladwell running cover for the enablers of serial child molester Jerry Sandusky?
  • The Atlantic’s Jeffrey Goldberg Was a Follower of Jewish Rightwing Terrorist Meir Kahane
  • Recovered History: Wall Street-Funded Self Help Propaganda Greased the Real Estate Bubble

RSS Simple Climate

  • What is the gender and ethnic balance of the science stories I write?
  • New year, new ideas
  • Why we should be wary of ’12 years to climate breakdown’ rhetoric
  • Can we fight climate change on our own?
  • Becoming more than an old gasbag: Climate chemistry on YouTube, cryogenic energy storage, and community renewable energy
  • How does carbon dioxide cause global warming?
  • Australian rodent first mammalian victim of climate change
  • Modern mussel shells much thinner than 50 years ago
  • A very beautiful and unusual animal in danger
  • Eyes on Environment: the many stories of climate change

RSS Skeptical Science

  • Skeptical Science New Research for Week #20 2026
  • Higher warming predictions for 2026 and 2027
  • A look back at ‘An Inconvenient Truth,’ 20 years later
  • Two videos about the Atlantic Meriodonal Overturning Circulation (AMOC)
  • 2026 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming News Roundup #19
  • Skeptical Science New Research for Week #19 2026
  • EGU2026 - Five days of virtual learning
  • 2026 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming News Roundup #18
  • Fact brief - Were the 2022 whale deaths off the US East Coast caused by offshore wind development?
  • Climate Adam - Climate Change is Destroying Lives... Now

RSS Smithsonian – Smart News

  • Music From Beyoncé and Taylor Swift, Plus Dozens of Other 'Audio Treasures,' Added to National Recording Registry
  • A 'Magical' Mirror the Powerful Queen of a British Tribe May Have Used Was Discovered in an Enormous Iron Age Hoard, Now on Display
  • Is the Unconscious Mind Aware of Its Surroundings? New Research Suggests Anesthetized Brains Can Process Overheard Words
  • New, Rare Dove Hatchlings Are a 'Source of Hope' for the Extinct-in-the-Wild Birds and a Step Forward in the Ambitious Project to Save Them
  • A Man Spotted Strange-Looking Rocks Near a Pond in Thailand. They Turned Out to Be the Bones of a Massive New Dinosaur Species
  • Neanderthals Got Cavities, Too—and New Research Suggests They Drilled Into Their Teeth to Treat Them, Just Like Modern Dentists
  • Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera Sing Themselves to Death in an Opera at the Met Inspired by Greek Mythology and Mexican Magical Realism
  • This Fish Hitches Rides in Manta Rays' 'Buttholes,' According to New Research
  • No Joke, Ahead of His 100th Birthday, Mel Brooks Donates His Hilarious Archive to the National Comedy Center
  • Could Building a Dam Across the Bering Strait Save the Planet From Some Effects of Climate Change?

RSS Social Text Journal

  • No Need for Gender: A Brief Meditation on Nonbinary Life
  • On Counter-cartographies: Neurodivergence and the Errancies of Performance
  • Kushnerism: Gaza Gentrification Means Palestinian Genocide
  • On Henrike Kohpeiß’s Bourgeois Coldness
  • On Nouri Gana’s Melancholy Acts
  • From the Classroom to Gaza: Belated Narratives and the Shared Struggle for Freedom
  • A Hundred Years of Coloniality: Sedulur Sikep and Fitri DK’s Nyawiji Ibu Bumi
  • Black Limbs, White Laws: On Patricia J. Williams’s The Miracle of the Black Leg
  • Two Poems from Neutrøis
  • A Review of Aliyyah Abdur-Rahman’s Millennial Style

RSS Speaking Truth to Power

  • Carolyn Interviewed about her book “Undaunted” by Canadian Ecopsychology Network
  • Will You Be Diagnosed With Mysticism In 2021? By Carolyn Baker
  • Collapsing Into The New Administration Amid Pandemic Lunacy, By Carolyn Baker
  • Collapse Changes Everything: Stop Whining For Perfection, By Carolyn Baker
  • The Collapse Of Ideology And The End Of Escape, By Jem Bendell
  • Top Global Experts Say Humanity Must ‘Heal Our Broken Relationship With Nature’ to Prevent Future Pandemics, Jessica Corbett
  • The United States: An Obituary, By Richard Heinberg
  • Reviving Radical Social Work In Collapse, By Desiree Coutinho
  • We Are All Being Cooked In The Soup Together, By Paul Levy
  • Some Progressives Are in Denial About Trump’s Fascist Momentum, By Norman Solomon

RSS squashpractice

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RSS State of Nature

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RSS State of the Union

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RSS Stephanie McMillan

  • Constant decentralization builds collective strength
  • What does this moment ask of us?
  • Forced to become a commodity
  • Comrades
  • United, the working class can end capitalist exploitation
  • Everything for Everyone
  • “Overthrow” and other verb choices
  • Dialectics: fundamental contradiction
  • Revolution: overturning
  • Intentions for 2022: affirmations for revolution

RSS Steve Cutts

  • Safety First
  • Happy Friday!
  • Loop #3
  • Merry Christmas!
  • Infinity Loop II
  • ‘The Battle of Walmarté’
  • Can’t beat the classics
  • Happy Judgement Day
  • Slumber Party
  • A Brief Disagreement

RSS Steve Lendman Blog

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RSS Stop the War Coalition

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RSS Submedia TV – Molotov!

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RSS Subrealism

  • Chipocalypse Now - I Love The Smell Of Deportations In The Morning
  • No Donut Or Coffee Breaks Required...,
  • Is This Why The Little Dogs Have Been Yapping And Snarling At The Russian Bear?
  • USS Harvey Milk To Be Renamed 'USS No Homo'
  • Lil Buckwheat Can't Get A Job But Still Gotta Eat....,
  • Negroe Fatigue
  • Our private research universities are not actually purely private...,
  • The Hidden Holocausts At Hanslope Park
  • Is RFK Jr Being Blackmailed?
  • Are American Elites Terrified Of Whitney Webb?

RSS Subversify Magazine

  • Hillbilly Elegy: An Uncomfortable Glimpse Into the Mindsent of Young Republicans
  • Andy Kaufman and Paul Reubens: Welcome to the Playhouse
  • Georgia Tann: America’s Most Notorious Child Trafficker
  • Comedy as Moral Allegory: Modern Literature’s Subtle Lessons
  • 10 Books Considered Ahead of Their Time

RSS Summit County Community Voice

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RSS Sun Weber

  • “Pity the nation"
  • A Requiem for the Beautiful Earth
  • On Our Way
  • Earth Gifts 2
  • Earth Gifts 1
  • An American Child's Future.
  • Green Irony
  • NARCISSUS from me me to ennui
  • Survivalists, The Optimistic Minority
  • A Rock, A Tree, A Cloud

RSS Survival Acres

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RSS Surviving Capitalism

  • Recommended Websites/weblogs & Sources of Information and Analysis (updated at least once a month to include current changes. Grand Thesis, which formulates my political philosophy, is below this post.)
  • Recommended Websites/weblogs & Sources of Information and Analysis (updated at least once a month to include current changes. Grand Thesis, which formulates my political philosophy, is below this post.)
  • Grand Thesis: Socialism is not only necessary, it is a matter of survival of the human species and other species (This is an essay in its final edited form except for needed improvements.)
  • Recommended post of the year: President Putin at the Valdai Discussion Club: “He Who Sows the Wind Will Reap the Whirlwind”
  • Recommended article: War on ‘Russian Disinformation’ is the New ‘War on Terror’ and Equally Fake with Ben Norton
  • A recommended article of the year: "Germany’s Energy Suicide: An Autopsy" by Pepe Escobar
  • Article of the month of September 2022: Breaking! NY Times: "US Created COVID-19"
  • Video of the month: "Is the Ukrainian War on its Own People Now Over?"
  • A message to my readers
  • Article of the year: "How Spooks and Establishment Journalists Are Circling The Wagons"

RSS Talking Points Memo

  • Virginia Backs Off Redistricting While South Carolina Plunges Ahead
  • Polis Commutes Sentence of Election-Denying Former County Clerk Tina Peters
  • Simple Request
  • Trump’s New $1.7 BILLION Slush Fund Boondoggle
  • Trump’s Blunder on Affordability This Week Was Worse Than It Appeared
  • Supreme Court Keeps Mifepristone Available For Now While Alito and Thomas Seethe in Dissent
  • More on Fancy Lawyers #2
  • Even the Initially Hesitant Southern States Have Now Joined GOP Race to Eliminate Black Political Representation
  • Big Round of New Trump Administration Smackdowns From Federal Judges
  • Red States and Blue States (But Mostly Blue States) Are Not Safe From Trump’s Retribution, Says Vance

RSS The Agonist Blog

  • Le guide ultime de la Scalabilité pour les startups en 2026
  • Comment résoudre les problèmes de son sur PC ?
  • Guide : Où et comment partager ses codes parrainage pour qu’ils soient utilisés ?
  • Hydratation capillaire : Astuces quotidiennes essentielles
  • Pourquoi les puffs à prix réduit séduisent-ils tant ?
  • Le rôle du verre dans le design contemporain : entre transparence et innovation
  • Comment optimiser les 3 jours d’essai gratuits sur Meetic pour tester sans erreurs
  • Quand les IA grand public refusent de travailler avec les pros
  • La Croix-Rousse à Lyon : vivre dans le quartier des « canuts », entre marchés, ateliers et vues à couper le souffle
  • Avocat en droit de la famille : Quel rôle dans le divorce par consentement mutuel ?

RSS The Angry Arab

  • Migrated to Twitter
  • Will US global hegemony last for another century?
  • Eulogy of Dar As-Sayyad
  • My interview from yesterday on the latest about the Khashoggi matter
  • US Secret Wars against Communism
  • The New Congress and Palestine
  • Why the US-Saudi Crisis will Pass
  • The Khashoggi Affair
  • jets over Ridyah
  • Untitled

RSS The Archdruid Report

  • This blog is now closed...

RSS The Art of Annihilation

  • It’s a Family Affair – Venezuela’s Second Largest Newspaper Serves U.S. Empire
  • Support for Canadian Truckers Skyrockets – Alongside Vaccine Injuries in Canadian Children
  • The Great Reset: The Final Assault on the Living Planet [It’s Not a Social Dilemma – It’s the Calculated Destruction of the Social, Part III]
  • It’s Not a Social Dilemma – It’s the Calculated Destruction of the Social [The Enclosure of Africa, Part II]
  • It’s Not a Social Dilemma – It’s the Calculated Destruction of the Social [Part I]
  • COMMENTS on ‘Green’ billionaires behind professional activist network that led suppression of ‘Planet of the Humans’ documentary
  • The Clairvoyant Ruling Class [“Scenarios for the Future of Technology & International Development” 2010 Report]
  • COVID-19 as a Weapon. The Crushing of the Disposable Working Class – by Design
  • The Show Must Go On. Event 201: The 2019 Fictional Pandemic Exercise [World Economic Forum, Gates Foundation et al.]
  • Mandatory Masks in the Age of Climate Emergency & Planetary Biodiversity Crisis

RSS THE AUTOMATIC EARTH

  • Debt Rattle May 15 2026
  • Debt Rattle May 14 2026
  • Debt Rattle May 13 2026
  • Debt Rattle May 12 2026
  • Debt Rattle May 11 2026
  • Debt Rattle May 10 2026
  • Debt Rattle May 9 2026
  • Debt Rattle May 8 2026
  • Debt Rattle May 7 2026
  • Debt Rattle May 6 2026

RSS The Big Picture

  • Good Quarterly Earnings Behavior
  • 10 Friday AM Reads
  • Hedge Fund & Alternative Manager Forum 2026
  • 10 Thursday AM Reads
  • At The Money: Is SpaceX IPO Breaking Capitalism?
  • 10 Wednesday AM Reads
  • 10 Tuesday AM Reads
  • Artificial Intelligence and Quarterly Earnings Reports
  • 10 Monday AM Reads
  • Transcript: Howard Lindzon, Social Leverage

RSS The Bureau of Investigative Journalism

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RSS The Conflicted Doomer

  • No Blog Post Today
  • Get Ready
  • Sick and Tired
  • The Year the Nose Fell Off
  • No Blog Post Today
  • Friendships
  • The Right to Be Stupid
  • Lies
  • Whole Lot of Whistling Going On
  • Being Thankful

RSS The Conversation: Energy + Environment

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RSS The Cost of Energy

  • Elevatorul auto, unul dintre cele mai importante instrumente dintr-un service
  • Avantaje si dezavantaje pentru iPhone 7
  • Cele Mai Bune Jucarii pentru Pisici
  • Cel Mai Bun Compresor Auto
  • Cel Mai Bun Pavilion de Gradina
  • Cel Mai Bun GPS pentru TIR
  • Cea Mai Buna Piscina Gonflabila
  • Cea Mai Buna Telecomanda Universala
  • Cele Mai Bune Manusi de Portar
  • Cele Mai Bune Genunchiere

RSS The Daily Banter

  • Interview With A Men’s Rights Activist And Child Porn Advocate
  • MAJOR UPDATE: The Daily Banter Is Closing Down And Moving Exclusively To Email
  • Interview With A Men’s Rights Activist And Child Porn Advocate
  • Watch Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez Rips Apart Dark Money In Politics In 5 Astonishing Minutes
  • Eddie Haskell’s State Of The Union Was An Infuriating Study In Gaslighting
  • Let Them Eat Fake
  • Trump Described By U.S. Intelligence Officials As Willfully Ignorant
  • We Now Have Proof Trump’s Family Separation Policy Was Meant To “Traumatize” Children
  • Are Steve Schmidt And Howard Schultz Helping Trump Get Re-elected? Maybe, Maybe Not.
  • Kellyanne Conway: Cory Booker ‘Sexist’ Because He Is Running For President

RSS The Daily Impact

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RSS The Dark Mountain Project

  • The Sister-Sows
  • Boundary? What Boundary?
  • Two Poems from the Bestiary
  • Birubi
  • Five Salmon Dancing
  • Introducing Dark Mountain: Issue 29
  • Plant People
  • Of Hidden Futures and Star-Shaped Worlds
  • January Archive Offer
  • Sea Beet, Sugar Beet

RSS The Disaffected Lib

  • The Sorcerer's Apprentice - Still Looking for the Magic Wand.
  • Raising the Bar or Catch-Up Ball
  • Living In an Anti-Vax World
  • Junk Has Got to Go. In a World Short of Resources, the Case for a Steady State Economy Returns.
  • Our Ghastly Future
  • An Inauspicious Day, March 11
  • A Trip Down Memory Lane
  • McConnell Tells Trump to "Back Off"
  • A Sea of Bodies
  • Wishful Thinking?

RSS The Dissenter

  • David vs. Goliath: Consumer Watchdog Gets Their Day in Court With Googl
  • What I Care About Is the Social Safety Net
  • Obama Meets With Labor, Progressive Groups Today
  • What the Marijuana Legalization Polling in 2012 Says About Its Prospects Moving Forward
  • Petraeus Affair Shows Dominant Power of Government Surveillance State
  • Pelosi to Speak to House Democrats Amid Rumors That She Will Step Down From Leadership
  • United Parcel Service to Boy Scouts of America – no funds for your anti-gay org
  • For the Long-Term Unemployed, It Is A Fiscal Cliff
  • Love In The House Of Spy
  • Fatster’s Roundup

RSS The Duck of Minerva

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RSS The Ecologist

  • Fracking industry advances with phase one exploratory applications in South Africa
  • What the closure of a small Suffolk factory says about the future of the automotive industry
  • Digging yourself a hole: how Australia is keeping coal current
  • How a circular economy can help prevent a global water crisis
  • Is Hurricane Harvey a harbinger for America’s future?
  • New report says electric cars will dramatically improve Britain's energy security
  • Climate change could tarnish the flavour of cava, study suggests
  • How to win the climate wars – talk about local ‘pollution’ not global warming
  • Ecologist Special Report: The Al Hima Revival
  • Dealing with climate migration: 'what matters are our actions'

RSS The Ecosocialist

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RSS The End of Capitalism

  • We live in the 20s
  • Marx and Colonialism – Zombie-Marxism Part 3.2 – What Marx Got Wrong
  • How Capitalism Causes Depression
  • The Paradoxical Viewpoint
  • How Anti-Capitalists Can Seize the Moment as Trump Enters the White House
  • Response to Reader’s Questions
  • Obscuring The Promise of Democracy: Mass Media Reacts to the 1960s
  • How Does Capitalism Make You Feel?

RSS The Energy Skeptic

  • “More and More and More” one of the best books on energy ever written
  • The staggering destruction of knowledge by Christians in the Roman Empire
  • The staggering cost of Net Zero in Britain
  • Why the R/P Reserves to Production ratio does not show when oil will run out
  • Catton on Collapse “Bottleneck: Humanity’s Impending Impasse”
  • Book Review of Grain Brain: Extraordinary claim not backed up by evidence
  • Why did everyone stop talking about Population & Immigration?
  • What would happen if trucks stopped running?
  • How to survive a nuclear winter
  • The insect apocalypse will kill billions more people than climate change

RSS The Equation (Union of Concerned Scientists)

  • The Scientific Integrity Act Just Got Its Biggest Boost in Seven Years
  • The Coast in Dispute: Climate, Development, and Dispossession in Puerto Rico
  • La costa en disputa: Cambio climático, desarrollo y despojo en Puerto Rico
  • Ask A Scientist: How Do We Save US Forest Service from President Trump’s Restructuring?
  • Zeldin Is Gutting EPA’s Budget and Mission
  • Danger Season Is Here Again, with Triple the Danger for 2026
  • What Are Data Centers Doing to the Electric Grid? Experts Don’t Know.     
  • Widespread Record US Drought Threatens Rural Livelihoods and Food Affordability
  • Documents Show Real Reason Why the White House Wants to Break Up NCAR
  • Farmers Face a Fertilizer Crisis at Spring Planting Time

RSS The Exile Nation Project

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RSS The Exiled Online

  • Baldfellas: How Belarus’s Failed Regime-Change Movement Shaped Putin’s War Plan
  • The War Nerd: NATO, A Memoir
  • The War Nerd: Was There A Plan In Afghanistan?
  • The War Nerd: Taiwan — The Thucydides Trapper Who Cried Woof
  • The War Nerd: Gray Wolves — The Fascists Nobody Wants To Talk About

RSS The Fall of Civilization

  • Join the LiveJournal Revival!
  • Woo-hoo!
  • The Recession has Restarted
  • 10 to 15 years
  • Untitled
  • NASA-sponsored HANDY model tells us what we already knew.
  • A big pile of crap.
  • If not one hell, then the other.
  • In the End, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends.
  • Peak Food

RSS The Global MuckRaker

  • Trump administration curbs state oversight of crypto industry
  • Following the paper trail to Guatemala to uncover what records can’t reveal about access to Keytruda
  • Tunisian authorities threaten to dissolve the parent company of ICIJ partner Inkyfada
  • US bars executives of Costa Rica’s leading newspaper La Nación from entry
  • Arizona gun shop owner faces terrorism-related charges for allegedly selling high-caliber weapons bound for Mexican cartels
  • ‘Escalating efforts’: A year after China Targets, Beijing’s global campaign against dissenters continues
  • Phony whistleblowers, fake journalists and cyber spies: ICIJ network targeted after China Targets probe 
  • Former co-owner of Panama Papers law firm convicted of aiding and abetting tax evasion
  • ‘Unacceptable’: Lawmakers react to revelations from ICIJ’s Cancer Calculus investigation
  • A ‘burgeoning black market’, inflated dosing and the over-judicialization of health care: reporters around the world tell stories about Keytruda

RSS The Great Change

  • The Woman Who Knew What Dirt Was
  • When the House Loses
  • What the Cyanobacteria Said
  • Move Fast and Glow Things
  • The Godfatter, Part 2
  • $6 Million, 19 Minutes, and the Bear in the Berry Bush
  • 12 Amendments to Meet the Moment
  • The Keys to the King Dumb
  • Our National Happiness Index
  • Draining the Swamp

RSS The Guardian – Environment

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RSS The HipCrime Vocab

  • New Location
  • New Site Up.
  • Automation and The Future of Work: Black Lives Matter - part 2
  • Automation and The Future of Work: Black Lives Matter
  • Against Techno-Fetishism
  • Corn-Pone Hitler?
  • The Other Dieoffs
  • The Dying Americans
  • The Hipcrime Vocab on JRE
  • Oil and Money - Lessons Learned

RSS The Institute for Anarchist Studies

  • Applications Now Closed for the 2025-2026 Grant Cycle
  • Announcing the 2026 Grant Cycle – Applications Now Open!
  • Encampments Paved the Way for Jewish Liberation by Naomi Bennet
  • 10 Movies for Anarchists (and the Anarcho-Curious) By Tate Williams
  • CONTROL: Call for Perspectives’ Submissions: 2026 Deadline Extended to February 16th!
  • Announcing the 2025 IAS Anarchist Horizons Grantees
  • Applications Now Closed for the 2024-2025 Grant Cycle
  • Announcing Our 2024-2025 Grant Cycle – Applications Now Open!
  • New IAS Lexicon Pamphlet: Democracy Beyond The State
  • Announcing the 2024 IAS Anarchist Horizons Grantees

RSS The Monkey Trap

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RSS The New Left Review

  • Alexander Zevin: Trump’s Gulf War
  • Nathan Sperber: Beyond Neoliberalism?
  • Nancy Fraser: Gaza as World Event
  • Richard Overy: Rethinking The Second World War
  • Loic Wacquant: Against Abolitionism
  • Marcus Verhagen: The Art of Counter-Remembrance
  • Sebastian Veg: Three Vistas of Hong Kong
  • Thomas Meaney: Western Promises

RSS The Oil Drum

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RSS The Onion (Satire)

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RSS The Physics arXiv Blog

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RSS The Political Circus

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RSS The Principle of Imminent Collapse

  • Emergent Characteristics and Behaviors
  • Flash Flooding and The PIC
  • Photo of the Day - Feb 12, 2024
  • Lunar New Year Year of the Dragon
  • My MERCHR shop of ClickaSnap Images
  • ClickASnap has partnered with Merchr Hub for Print on Demand
  • The PIC in Everyday Situations
  • Dear Readers of the PIC
  • The AI Revolution Will Be What We Make It
  • Hop on Over to My New Blog

RSS The Rag Blog

  • ALICE EMBREE / MAY DAY! MAY DAY!
  • ALICE EMBREE / HISTORY / Where on earth was The Rag?
  • JAN LANCE / RETIREES / Senior Solidarity
  • MICHAEL MEEROPOL / FOREIGN POLICY / Trump’s War of Choice
  • LAMAR HANKINS / FARMWORKERS / Another civil rights icon who had feet of clay
  • ALICE EMBREE / REVIEW / Reading C. Wright Mills in the Age of Trump
  • LAMAR HANKINS / RELIGION / Make America’s public school children bible-readers again
  • JONAH RASKIN / BOOK REVIEW / Dangerous, Dirty, Violent, and Young: A Fugitive Family in the Revolutionary Underground
  • ROXANN WEDEGARTNER / BOOK REVIEW / From the Octagon: People, Places, News, Views by Allen Young.
  • DAVE ZIRIN / CULTURE / Bad Bunny Steals the Show

RSS The Raw Story

  • Allies concerned over Trump's unreliable stance on Taiwan
  • Bruce Springsteen snubs Chris Christie during a concert
  • 'Take the hint': Senate GOP leaders openly hope Trump shuts up about vulnerable Republican
  • NYT's Maggie Haberman warns Trump handing Dems powerful ammo without even realizing it
  • Kash Patel exploded at FBI official who dared question girlfriend's security detail: NYT
  • Trump DHS chief struggling for 'positive human relationship' with his GOP overseer: report
  • GOP official busted in child predator sting operation
  • Sam Alito watched blue states outsmart him — and he's 'big mad': legal analysts
  • Fox's Maria Bartiromo clashes with guest on air over Trump's war
  • 'Stinks to high heaven': Chris Hayes connects the dots on Trump's brazen slush fund

RSS The Satanic Capitalist

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RSS The Siberian Times: Ecology

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RSS The Skeptical Humorist

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RSS The Schuster Institute for Investigative Journalism

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS The Smirking Chimp

  • How to Describe this Catastrophe?
  • Trump’s Gaffe ‘Revealed a Deeper Truth’ About His Mental State
  • A Diminished Trump Goes to China — for Help
  • Making History in Dark Times: Refuse Numbness. Refuse Silence.
  • Did Xi Welcome Wealth, Power, and Corruption as Trump Puts Taiwan on the Table?
  • She Spoke Up for Due Process. Now She’s Detained Without Charges.
  • Thomas Friedman on Trump’s Iran War: It’s Bad... Now Let’s Make It Worse
  • MAGA Supreme Court OKs GOP Overthrow of American Democracy
  • We Need a Department of Peace, Not $1.5 Trillion for More War
  • Trump’s Bizarre Antics Aren’t Flying Anymore — and There’s a Reason for That: Analysis

RSS The Sociological Cinema

  • Don't Be Racist!
  • Don't Be a Racist!
  • How One Sociologist is Using Fiction to Address Trauma, Healing, and Interpersonal Relationships: An Interview with Dr. Patricia Leavy
  • No going back to normal--the left must seize the moment and dominate the crisis
  • An Open Letter: What Is the End-goal of Sociology?
  • ​Film: A Case of Literary Sociology
  • Tracking the Model Minority Trope in Hollywood Film
  • Sociologist’s New Novel Teaches Research Methods and Critical Thinking
  • Racism, Can You Talk About It? An Infographic Assignment
  • An Interview with Dr. Patricia Leavy about the Handbook of Arts-Based Research

RSS The Solari Blog Report

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS The Thin Red Line

  • Cuba was saved from a brutal, destabilizing despotism
  • Impediments to Peace in Syria
  • Microchip your Pets!
  • The Federal Reserve: A quintessentially capitalist institution
  • Guilty of everything: How America scapegoats a public dissident
  • The right to suppress human rights: 2 case studies
  • Thoughts on the Shuttering of Al Jazeera America
  • My house for a kingdom: Israel resists Palestinian concessions
  • Human life is too important to let police take it with impunity
  • Palestinians Demand huge Concessions - Survival, Rights & Non-destroyed Infrastructure

RSS The Tree

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS The Usual Mix

  • Što se MUP-u mota po glavi zadnjih 50+ godina?
  • “Nekultura” hrvatskih “biciklista”
  • Zagrebačke Mickey Mouse biciklističke staze, 2841. nastavak: 3. generacija loših rubnjaka
  • Trijumf “zdravog razuma”
  • Otvoreno pismo B.net-u/A1
  • Biciklom po svijetu: pokret!
  • Biciklom po svijetu: dalmatinsko zaleđe
  • Aktivistička posla: Upravni sud srušio Studiju utjecaja na okoliš za golf na Srđu
  • Kratka povijest hrvatskih šefova države
  • Reforma kurikuluma

RSS The Yes Men

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RSS The Yes Men Blog

  • An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.

RSS The Young Turks

  • Republicans Have A School Shooting Conspiracy Theory
  • The Young Turks LIVE! 2.20.18
  • How To Get Featured On TYT
  • White People Claiming To Be Attacked At Black Panther
  • Your Boss Might Be Stealing From You But There's Nothing You Can Do About It
  • Cancer Drug Price Raised 1400%
  • WORST National Anthem Performance EVER
  • Conservatives Attacking School Shooting Survivors Online
  • Democratic Focus Group Has Some Bad News...
  • Top REPUBLICAN Donor: No More Money Until AR-15 Ban

RSS This is Ecocide

  • Fausto Pocar
  • Robert Bray
  • Untitled
  • Ocean for Ecocide Law: coming together to legally protect the ocean
  • Agriculture and a liveable planet: the transformative role of ecocide law
  • Davos 2023: the transformative power of ecocide law
  • Accelerating strategic positive change: the business case for ecocide law
  • Recognizing ecocide: a legal framework to protect nature, communities and our common future
  • Global crisis and the potential of the ICC: relevance of ecocide as the fifth crime
  • Powerful and practical legal tools in pursuit of climate justice

RSS Thom Hartmann

  • Sue's Stack is moving
  • Monday 06 March '23 show notes
  • Friday 03 March '23 show notes
  • Thursday 02 March '23 show notes
  • Wednesday 01 March '23 show notes
  • Tuesday 28 February '23 show notes
  • Monday 27 February '23 show notes
  • Friday 24 February '23 show notes
  • Thursday 23 February '23 show notes
  • Wednesday 22 February '23 show notes

RSS Thomas Riggins’ Blog

  • China's Road to Socialism
  • New German Left Party
  • China's World View via the NYT
  • Ukraine Update
  • BIDEN VS TRUMP
  • NATO's Proxy War
  • More New York Times Anti-China Propaganda
  • Will the real Zizek stand up
  • Marxists & The Democratic Party: Coalition or Collision?
  • A Stained Legend?

RSS Thoughts On The Roof

  • The AMOC
  • Chris Hayes and Bill McKibbin
  • Arctic - Antarctic tipping point
  • Iran's nuclear ambitions
  • Democracy
  • Ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny
  • An open letter to Kamala
  • The call for an end of the war and for a two state solution
  • Sorting out the American System of government
  • The criminal Supreme Court

RSS Three E’s

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RSS Tom Toles

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RSS Too Much Online

  • In France, Echoes of a Daring FDR
  • A Flying Public Finally Erupts
  • The Railroad Robber Baron Returns
  • The Charities Making Inequality Worse
  • Has America Become Too Generous?
  • Policing in America’s Plutocracy
  • A New Rationalization for Riches
  • Standing Up for ‘Bullied’ CEOs
  • By the Numbers
  • What Makes a Recession ‘Great’?

RSS Top of the Ticket

  • Granderson: Jason Collins came out so we all could keep moving forward
  • Letters to the Editor: As reading skills plummet, we need to foster a love of books again
  • Letters to the Editor: When AI comes for your job in entertainment, maybe then you'll care
  • Letters to the Editor: If California really wants to rebuild democracy, repeal Proposition 50
  • Letters to the Editor: The toll of livestock farming goes far beyond the animals' suffering
  • Letters to the Editor: California tribes' input on ancestral redwoods isn't just symbolic
  • Letters to the Editor: Improving supply chain infrastructure is key to mitigating disruption
  • Letters to the Editor: President Kennedy established USAID for a reason. We're vulnerable without it
  • Contributor: Freed by Trump, the Jan. 6 criminals are preying on children and others
  • Contributor: Consider reconnecting in the season of Mother's Day and Father's Day

RSS Transition Voice

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RSS Transparency International News Feed

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RSS Treasure Islands

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RSS Tree Hugger

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RSS Triple Crisis

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RSS TRNN: Audio Feed

  • UK Local Elections: Labour Moves Forward
  • 200th Anniversary of the Birth of Marx and a Revolution in Understanding History
  • Ohio Governor's Race: Kucinich Attacks Cordray's 'Left' Credentials
  • Activists Discuss How Public Officials Thwart Accountability for Sexual Harassment
  • French Unions & Students Mobilize Against Reforms: Another May '68?
  • US Gov. and Media Whitewash 'Reformer' Saudi Prince MBS as He Beheads Dissidents
  • Natalie Portman's Boycott of Netanyahu Prompts Attack by Billionaire-Backed Right-Wing Rabbi Shmuley Boteach
  • UK's 'Windrush Scandal' Shines Light on Who is an 'Illegal' Immigrant
  • 'Poison Papers': US and Canadian Regulators Colluded with Manufacturers of Highly Toxic Substances
  • Police Crack Down on Puerto Rico May Day March Against Austerity

RSS TRNN: News Feed

  • UK Local Elections: Labour Moves Forward
  • Netanyahu's Long History of Crying Wolf over Fake 'WMDs' in Iran and Iraq
  • Laura Flanders Show: Taking Down the Confederacy - Symbol by Symbol
  • 200th Anniversary of the Birth of Marx and a Revolution in Understanding History
  • US Interventions in Latin America Continue and Intensify
  • Ohio Governor's Race: Kucinich Attacks Cordray's 'Left' Credentials
  • Sixth Consecutive Week of Friday Gaza Protests Leaves Over 160 Wounded
  • Economic Update: The Contributions of Karl Marx (Pt 1/4)
  • Hopkins Students Fight Against 'School to War Pipeline'
  • Activists Discuss How Public Officials Thwart Accountability for Sexual Harassment

RSS Truth-Out

  • Despite Repeated Bombings, CENTCOM Head Denies US Targeted Schools in Iran
  • Cuba Runs Out of Oil Amidst Suffocating US Blockade
  • Israel Is Now Occupying 60 Percent of the Gaza Strip
  • SCOTUS Ruling on Voting Rights Act Puts a Third of Black Caucus Seats at Risk
  • In Scathing Ruling, Judge Blocks DOJ from Obtaining Medical Data for Trans Youth
  • Rep. Jared Golden Joins GOP to Block House Iran War Powers Resolution Yet Again
  • VA Gov. Spanberger Vetoes Bill Allowing Public Employees to Collectively Bargain
  • For Palestinians, the Nakba Isn’t Just History. It’s Also Our Present.
  • The FBI Has Established a “Payback Squad” to Target Trump Foes — Report
  • Tennessee’s War on Black Political Power Demands Not Just Outrage But Resistance

RSS Undercurrents Alternative News

  • 'Ethical loneliness’- Sheffield Documentary Festival
  • Sol Cinema gives Wales the Royal Treatment
  • Free radical counter culture videos to good home
  • Majority of Government press meetings are with right wingers
  • Watch LIVE reports from COP climate talks & resistance in Glasgow
  • Court rules undercover policing operation against protest movements were 'unlawful and sexist'
  • Exploding Cinema- video art in the 1990s- new book out
  • Crane protest in support of Palestine at Vauxhall, London
  • Rich man V skateboarders of Mumbles (beep beep)
  • Solar powered Cinema accepts first cryptocurrency payment

RSS Underminers Blog

  • Underminers in German
  • Pulped
  • Autumn Migration
  • After Seasonturn : The Author as Underminer
  • The Conorol Trilogy
  • Guest Essays – At Last A Page
  • Looking for an Agent
  • The Network is No More
  • 10k and Running
  • A Fictional Start

RSS Uploads by Vsauce2

  • Giant Robot, Electronic Skin and more -- Mind Blow #117
  • Robot Muscle, Plant Tattoos and more -- Mind Blow #116
  • Skywalker Hand, Planet Discovery and more -- Mind Blow #115
  • I Eat Brains And Explain Zombies
  • Laser Mapping, Floating Island and more -- Mind Blow #114
  • Dunbar's Number (Friend Limit)
  • One-Touch Healing Device -- Mind Blow #113
  • Eclipse At Sea
  • The Invention Of Blue
  • Scapegoats

RSS Urbanomics

  • The myth of ring-fenced "private" markets
  • Industrial policy is back, but the implementation challenge remains
  • Weekend reading links
  • Some low hanging fuits in urban planning
  • The problem of managing Chinese FDI to prevent another dependency
  • Weekend reading links
  • A graphical summary of chokepoints in global trade
  • Some thoughts on the RBI's exchange rate management policy
  • Impact of policy interventions and shocks on India's economic growth
  • Weekend reading links

RSS Versobooks.com

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RSS Veterans Today

  • Who Set Up The Hit?
  • Might The Polls Be Wrong?
  • Why Is the African Dish, Shakshuka So Popular In Israel?
  • Exploring Winning Betting Strategies In Blackjack
  • How to Identify GI Bill Fraud
  • Rumsfeld Shady Heritage in Pandemic: GILEAD’s Intrigues with WHO & Wuhan Lab. Bio-Weapons’ Tests with CIA & Pentagon
  • Age Old Battle Between Khazarian Mafia and True Christianity Crashing Into Finality
  • Shipping to Poland from the US: Navigating Customs Clearance
  • Braving the Storm and Tackling Addiction in the Ranks of US Veterans
  • Navigating the Transition from Battlefield to Civilian Life for Our Homefront Heroes

RSS Vice

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RSS Vimeo Video Picks

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RSS Volatility

  • The Final Addiction
  • Where it Comes From and Where it Goes
  • Ordeal
  • The Intact Against the Cult (with notes on public protest)
  • Come Home
  • Springtime
  • Desert City
  • Make A Desert to Prepare the Way for the Beast
  • Why Reject the Good News?
  • Miasma Now

RSS Waging NonViolence

  • From ICE to Iran, veterans are challenging US militarism 
  • A call for bold action from the Gaza flotilla
  • Mothers are the most underestimated force for change
  • The Global Sumud Flotilla is a mission of mercy, met with cruelty
  • May Day was even more important than you think
  • Why power analysis is key to fighting ICE
  • A peace agenda to end military madness
  • Rural India is not giving up a work guarantee without a fight
  • Cooperation is more powerful than coercion
  • How two phone booths connected strangers across party lines

RSS Waldenswimmer

  • Paul Beckwith, thinking WAY outside the box
  • Saturday Morning Essay: "Pond Scum," a New Yorker article by Kathryn Schulz
  • Now Is the Winter of Our Discontent Made Glorious Summer
  • Over at Fielding's Place
  • Check in with Fielding Mellish over at the other place
  • Arctic Sea Ice and Weird Weather
  • A few notes from Mellish on 9-11 Truther
  • A Reply from Professor Oscar Pemantle
  • Over at Fielding Mellish Observations
  • Politically Incorrect observations at Fielding's Place

RSS Wall of Controversy

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RSS War Criminals Watch

  • 4/7/25 Israeli Troops Blow Whistle on War Crimes in Gaza 'Kill Zone'
  • 3/29/25 The Real Outrage in Yemen
  • 3/9/25 Columbia University’s Nazi Tradition
  • 11/7/24 Don't Let Democrats Whitewash What They Did on Gaza Once Trump Is in Office
  • 10/7/24 1 The Human Toll: Indirect Deaths from War in Gaza and the West Bank, October 7, 2023 Forward
  • 10/07/24 United States Spending on Israel’s Military Operations and Related U.S. Operations in the Region, October 7, 2023 – September 30, 2024
  • 10/4/24 Inside the State Department’s Weapons Pipeline to Israel
  • 9/18/24 'The Genocide Gentry': Weapon Execs Sit on Boards of Universities, Institutions
  • 9/16/24 Biden Genocide Case: Legal Experts, Ex-Diplomats, Human and Civil Rights Groups Urge Court to Review Palestinians’ Claims That Biden Is Enabling Israel’s Genocide in Gaza
  • 9/1/24 UARCs: The American Universities that Produce Warfighters

RSS War in Context

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  • The poison in Britain’s Labour Party
  • We have become enslaved by our impatience
  • A history of hype behind Cambridge Analytica
  • Facebook employees feel increasingly responsible for the world’s problems
  • The ancient hunt in which the tracker’s skill united reason and imagination
  • Novichok chemical attack near Porton Down fed catnip to conspiracy theorists
  • The depletion of the human microbiome and how it can be restored
  • Are we smart enough to know how smart animals are?
  • The immobilization of life on Earth

RSS War is a Crime

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RSS Water is Life

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  • Humanitarian Disaster in the Sahara
  • We Are The Cure
  • The Future Is Now the Present
  • A Thank you
  • Making Rivers Come Alive...My Struggle To Live
  • Planning For An Island's Demise
  • Keep Talking...
  • NASA/Water In Space
  • Climate Change Drying Up One of World's Largest Lakes

RSS We Meant Well

  • Is Iran a Turning Point?
  • Whistleblowers, Leakers, and Spies
  • Can the U.S. Win the Iran War?
  • The One Absolute Non-Negotiable Item with Iran
  • Why Does Media Misrepresent the Iran War?
  • Senate Challenges State Department for Abandoning DEI Back Door Entrance Path
  • RIP Chuck Norris
  • U.S. Naval Escorts in the Persian Gulf: Lessons from the Tanker War
  • Will the Kurds Fight Iran for the U.S., Again?
  • The “New” Iran? What Happens Next

RSS Web of Debt

  • THE ABUNDANCE PARADIGM: WHY AI FORCES A RETHINKING OF MONEY ITSELF — PART 1
  • All Wars Are Bankers’ Wars: Iran and the Bankers’ Endgame
  • Regime Change at the Fed: From Big Bank Bailouts to Local Productivity
  • The Wealth Concentration Engine: Rethinking America’s Financial Plumbing
  • Compound Interest Is Devouring the Federal Budget: It’s Time to Take Back the Money Power
  • Why New York City Needs a Public Bank
  • How a Fed Overhaul Could Eliminate the Federal Debt Crisis, Part II: Curbing Fed Independence
  • How a Fed Overhaul Could Eliminate the Federal Debt Crisis, Part I: The Fed’s Hidden Drain
  • Unaudited Power: The Military Budget Nobody Controls
  • The GENIUS Act and the National Bank Acts of 1863-64: Taking a Cue from Lincoln

RSS What If?

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  • Transatlantic Car Rental
  • Hailstones
  • Hot Banana

RSS Where’s Our Money

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RSS Whole Larder Love: Grow Gather Hunt Cook

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RSS Who What Why

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RSS Why Evolution Is True

  • “Raising Hare”: an engrossing natural-history memoir
  • More criticism of Kristof’s allegations about Israel
  • Jesus ‘n’ Mo ‘n’ transformation
  • Friday: Hili dialogue
  • The Times ditched its public editor, but oy, does it need one now!
  • Readers’ wildlife photos
  • Thursday: Hili dialogue

RSS Wild Ancestors

  • Untitled
  • Wild Free & Happy Sample 65
  • Wild Free and Happy Sample 64
  • Wild Free and Happy Sample 63
  • Wild Free and Happy Sample 62
  • Wild Free and Happy Sample 61
  • Wild Free and Happy Sample 60
  • Wild New World
  • Wild Free and Happy sample 84: Wild Free Isolation
  • Wild Free and Happy sample 83 Update: Human Web

RSS William Bowles

  • Iran SEIZES Ship, Trmp STUNNED as China Summit BACKFIRES | Greg Stoker & Elina Xenophontos
  • Italy jails Palestinian over videos on his phone
  • NHS: Wes Streeting’s final Bill
  • Direct Action, Terrorist Consequences
  • The Future – Socialism – Is Possible and Necessary: The Twentieth Newsletter (2026)
  • Urgent – can you do this today?
  • PLO Lumumba: Macron Is Raiding Africa Again | France, Kenya & The New Scramble
  • Iran LOCKED & LOADED on US Navy, Trump UTTERLY HUMILIATED by China | Ben Norton
  • Françafrique 2.0: Macron, Multipolarity, and the Quiet Reassembly of Empire
  • Black Agenda Report May 13, 2026

RSS Wired – Danger Room

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RSS Wolff Economics

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RSS Work of the Negative

  • Trump to Ukraine/Europe: Drop dead
  • Syrian revolution topples Assad: preliminary thoughts
  • Lead-editorial article: The U.S. election as manifestation of counterrevolution
  • The U.S. election as manifestation of counterrevolution
  • Review of Terminal Warfare
  • The perfect COP head is the oil honcho al-Jaber
  • Trumpist coup reveals fascist threat and Left’s philosophic void
  • The Trump administration’s fear of teenagers
  • No One Is Too Small to Make a Difference, by Greta Thunberg–book review
  • Climate strikes as resistance and revolutionary potential: the connection with Marcuse’s concept of the liberation of nature as determinant between socialism and fascism

RSS Wunderground: Dr. Jeff Masters

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RSS WWS

  • Germany: Accelerated job cuts in the auto and supplier industry
  • South Asia, the Iran war and the bankruptcy of bourgeois nationalism
  • CIA director’s trip to Havana paves way for regime change operation
  • Attend Sunday's meeting to vote for an immediate Nexteer strike!  
  • Sri Lankan government extends draconian state of emergency
  • Germany’s May 8 school strike underscores the necessity of a socialist perspective against conscription and war
  • Trump seeks $1.7 billion taxpayer payout for allies and January 6 fascists
  • Workers Struggles: Asia, Australia and the Pacific
  • WSWS interviews Pulitzer Prize winner Brian Goldstone, author of There Is No Place for Us: Working and Homeless in America: “In America right now, a low-wage job … is homelessness waiting to happen”
  • The role of Australian imperialism in the war on Iran and China

RSS Yale Environment 360

  • U.S. Fuel Blockade Spurs On a Solar Boom in Cuba
  • Restoring the Flow: A Milestone in the Revival of the Everglades
  • Warmer Waters Bring Great White Sharks to Southern California
  • By Fueling Drought, El Niño Raises the Risk of Violent Conflict
  • As the Planet Warms, Why Is the Upper Atmosphere Cooling?
  • Among Flowering Plants, Thousands of Evolutionary Oddities at Risk of Extinction
  • Why Fears Are Growing Over the Fate of a Key Atlantic Current
  • Rising Seas Could Encircle New Orleans by the End of This Century
  • Airborne Microplastics May Be Warming the Planet
  • Nearly Half of Wolves in Italy Are Now Part Dog

RSS Yes Magazine

  • The World Is Burning—Does the YES! Approach Still Matter?
  • Beyond Criminality in the U.S. Immigration System
  • Lessons From the Māori and Japanese Peoples on Grieving Pregnancy Loss
  • Messages of Fierce Hope From the Global South
  • Boycotts Are Back: Queer Travelers Fight Bigotry With Their Wallets
  • Growing Up On the Migration Route
  • Recovering Lost Stories From Trans History
  • The Freedom to Choose Hysterectomy
  • St. Louis Says “Not Another Nickel” to Human Rights Violators
  • Voters Demand a Bolder and More Progressive Democratic Party

RSS Your Passport to Complaining

  • A New Peruvian Commune
  • Is Texas a Dummymander?
  • AI and the midterms – Bushwick Feb 15
  • Commie Clothes Fire
  • A new Paradox Collective
  • The Joys of Censorship
  • November is Mamdani Wins
  • Wearable Art and Creating the Sankofa Space
  • Many Conference Updates
  • Helping Out – Dumpster Dives and Build Camps

RSS Z Communications Economy Page

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RSS Zed Books

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RSS Zero Anthropology

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RSS Zoriah

  • New Exhibition Opening Today in Chicago
  • Children's Most Loved Toys
  • Paris Attacks
  • Happy Halloween From Paris - Père Lachaise Cemetery
  • Chernobyl Small Group Workshop - One Spot Left for December 2015

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