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Collapse of Industrial Civilization

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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

Tags

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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Crossing The Last Red Line: Nuclear Targets, Dimming Lifelines, And A Hotter War

21 Saturday Mar 2026

Posted by xraymike79 in Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Mental Health

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Civilian Nuclear Power Targets, Climate Change And Conflict, Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Critical Infrastructure Warfare, Desalination Infrastructure Vulnerability, Energy World System Collapse, Gulf Desalination Dependence, Heat Stress And Habitability, Infrastructural Overshoot, Iran War Escalation, Military Targeting Of Lifelines, Nuclear Escalation Dynamics, Nuclear Taboo Erosion, Radiological Disaster Risk, Trump Iran War Doctrine, Water Scarcity And War

The first phase of Epic Fury was about cutting cables in the energy world‑system. Israeli jets and Iranian missiles traded fire over South Pars and Ras Laffan, and the result was predictable: a structural hole blown in the global gas market, a price regime that stopped looking like a spike, and a slow, uneven rationing war that will take years to work through. That would have been enough to define an era on its own. Instead, the war has kept moving up the ladder of critical infrastructure: from fields and pipelines to desalination plants, from refineries and LNG trains to the edges of nuclear power stations, all in a region that was already drifting toward the edge of physical habitability. What began as a campaign to degrade an adversary’s energy system now looks more like a live‑fire exercise in how to break the basic conditions that keep a hotter, drier Middle East barely livable.

From Gas Hubs to Nuclear Sites

The taboo on attacking nuclear facilities did not shatter first in Iran. Russia’s assault and occupation of Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant turned an operating reactor complex into a battlefield, just as Israel’s earlier strikes on Iraq’s unfinished Osirak reactor and Syria’s al‑Kibar site had already shown that “nuclear‑related” targets were on the table in regional wars. What Epic Fury adds is not a first violation but a second theater, a confirmation that what happened at Zaporizhzhia was not an aberration but the beginning of a new normal.

The official story in Washington and Tel Aviv is that nothing essential has changed. The United States and Israel insist they are hitting military targets: missile factories, air defense radars, command posts, and—in one carefully framed phrase—“nuclear‑related facilities.” Iranian officials and the International Atomic Energy Agency tell a more unsettling story. Natanz, the heart of Iran’s enrichment program, has been hit hard enough that satellite imagery and commercial analysts agree on visible damage to surface structures and underground access points. Commercial satellite images show several buildings destroyed and at least two tunnel entrances blasted open at the Fuel Enrichment Plant, damage US officials say was caused by ground‑penetrating munitions aimed at the underground complex. Iran calls it a joint U.S.–Israeli strike designed to cripple its nuclear infrastructure. U.S. officials prefer to call it a “limited operation” to remind Tehran what Washington and its allies can still do.

To the southwest, on the Gulf coast, another line has been skirted if not fully crossed. At Bushehr, the only operating nuclear power plant in the Middle East outside Israel, a projectile landed roughly 350 meters from the reactor building, close enough to destroy an auxiliary structure and kick off emergency checks but, so far, not close enough to breach the reactor itself. The IAEA says a structure 350 meters from the reactor building was “hit and destroyed” and has warned that “any attack at or near nuclear power plants…should never take place,” calling the incident a direct challenge to its basic safety pillars in wartime. Rosatom, which supplied the plant’s 72 tons of reactor fuel and oversees more than 200 tons of spent fuel on site, has described the strike as occurring in “close proximity to an operating power unit” and has publicly cautioned that a less fortunate hit could have produced a regional‑scale disaster. The fact that this one did not cause a radiological release is a matter of luck as much as design.

The governments that ordered the strikes insist there is a clean distinction between “nuclear weapons sites” and “civilian nuclear power,” between Natanz and Bushehr, between sending a message and starting a catastrophe. In practice, missiles and drones do not recognize those categories. Once you accept that it is legitimate to fire explosives at a complex where enriched uranium is produced or burned, you have accepted the risk that a guidance error, faulty intelligence, or simple misjudgment of blast effects could turn a deterrent signal into a radiological accident. The distance between a hole in a turbine hall and a cracked containment dome is not an ethical chasm. It is a few hundred meters and the luck of a guidance chip.

Winding Down after Crossing the Line

The strangest part is how quickly the planners want to move on. Barely days after confirming strikes on Natanz and impacts near Bushehr, Trump began talking about “winding down” the war. In public remarks and leaks to favored outlets, aides describe the nuclear and energy hits as proof that Washington has “re‑established deterrence” and can now look for a way out. In interviews after the Natanz and Bushehr strikes, Trump has talked about Epic Fury “winding down” within “four to six weeks,” explicitly presenting the attacks on Iran’s nuclear and export infrastructure as the leverage that makes de‑escalation possible. At the same time, Washington has pushed another 2,500 Marines and an amphibious assault ship into the Gulf, close enough to threaten Iran’s Hormuz islands and Kharg export terminal if a “limited” ground option is ever called in. The implication is clear: the United States has shown it can penetrate Iran’s air defenses, scorch its export capacity, and reach into the most sensitive parts of its nuclear program. Having done so, it can declare success and pivot back to domestic concerns like fuel prices and the election calendar.

Tehran has offered its own answer. In addition to continuing missile and drone strikes on Gulf energy infrastructure, Iranian forces have fired at the joint UK–US base on Diego Garcia, the Indian Ocean logistics hub that underpins U.S. operations from the Middle East to East Africa. The attack did not destroy the base or sink a carrier group. It did not need to. The point was to show that Iran can reach a core node in the American military network far beyond the Strait of Hormuz, and that nuclear‑site strikes will not go unanswered with purely symbolic gestures. Long‑range missiles at Diego Garcia sit on the same escalatory rung as projectiles now landing near Bushehr.

This is the uncomfortable symmetry of the war’s second act. Washington wants to trade a limited set of extreme actions—hitting Natanz, skimming Bushehr—for a face‑saving exit. Tehran wants to prove that those actions have opened up a field of targets that used to be off‑limits, from island bases to desalination plants. Both are right. The nuclear line has been crossed, and the menu of acceptable targets has expanded in ways that will be hard to roll back, even if a ceasefire is signed and the news cycle moves on.

Heat And Water in a War Zone

All of this is happening in a region that was already running out of room to make mistakes. The Middle East and North Africa are warming at roughly twice the global average, with 2024 clocked as the hottest year on record for the Arab region and a growing number of summer days pushing past 50 degrees Celsius. Regional climate assessments now warn that by mid‑century nearly the entire population of MENA will be living under conditions of acute water scarcity, with many coastal districts facing recurring “dangerous heat stress” events in summer. Meteorological agencies now talk about “compound extremes”—heatwaves stacked on droughts—that push river flows, soil moisture, and power systems into simultaneous crisis for weeks at a time. Dangerous droughts triggered by heatwaves are accelerating, not receding.

Iran itself has been living in that compound zone for years. Successive droughts and extreme heatwaves have left major reservoirs near Tehran and other cities at single‑digit capacity, triggered protests over dry taps, and forced officials to warn openly of a possible “Day Zero” when municipal systems run dry. Studies of the Persian Gulf’s humid heat show that coastal areas are already spending hours each summer at wet‑bulb temperatures above what outdoor workers can safely endure, with documented spikes close to the threshold beyond which even a healthy human body can no longer shed heat fast enough to survive outside.

That is the climate background against which Gulf states have bet their survival on energy‑intensive lifelines: desalination mega‑plants that turn seawater into drinking water, and in Iran’s case a growing role for nuclear power in a grid already strained by air‑conditioning and irrigation pumps. Analysts estimate that Gulf monarchies such as Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the UAE now get 70 to 90 percent of their municipal drinking water from a few dozen desalination mega‑plants strung along the same vulnerable coasts as their refineries and LNG terminals, and that the wider Middle East and North Africa region accounts for roughly 40 percent of global desalination capacity. The more the region bakes and dries, the more it depends on those plants.

When drones and missiles start hitting those facilities, or landing a few hundred meters from an operating reactor, the risk is not just poisoned air and a temporary run on bottled water. It is the prospect of cities that already spend weeks each year near the edge of heat tolerance suddenly losing the systems that make that heat survivable. In a region with almost no renewable freshwater of its own and summers that are fast becoming physiologically hostile outdoors, turning desalination plants and nuclear sites into legitimate military targets is not just escalation. It is brinkmanship with the thin layer of infrastructure that still separates an overheated, depleted Middle East from outright uninhabitability.

From Energy Overshoot to Infrastructural Overshoot

Long before this war, climate scientists and political ecologists were clear about the basic shape of the problem. A high‑energy civilization had overshot the safe operating limits of its planet. The Middle East was one of the clearest examples: a region with almost no renewable freshwater, rapidly rising temperatures, and a development model built on burning hydrocarbons for export while using an increasing share of that heat to power desalination plants, air‑conditioning, and ever‑thirstier cities. Current estimates put the region’s share of global renewable freshwater at around 2 percent, even as it hosts more than 6 percent of the world’s population and an overwhelming share of its desalination plants. The system “worked” as long as the revenues flowed, the seas stayed cool enough to make desalination marginally efficient, and no one shot missiles at the infrastructure that made it possible.

The Iran war has accelerated that overshoot into something harsher: infrastructural overshoot. Oil and gas fields are still there, but the trains and terminals that move their output are damaged or under threat. The atmosphere is still absorbing more carbon, but every extra ton now pushes the climate system further past safe thresholds, adding not just more warming but discrete heatwaves and drought clusters that knock out crops and grids. The Gulf still has seawater to spare, but turning it into drinkable water requires electricity from plants and grids that are now, unmistakably, part of the target set.

In the prior essay “Epic Fury And The Unraveling Of The Energy World‑System,” the structural argument was about energy: a new price regime, a first global rationing war, a world where “normal” became a recurring scramble for shares of a shrinking, weaponized flow. The nuclear and desalination strikes add another layer. They show that the infrastructures we built to cope with overshoot—civilian nuclear power, desalination mega‑plants, transcontinental bases that knit the imperial energy order together—are themselves subject to the same logic of military targeting and political short‑termism that broke the old system in the first place.

What “Winding Down” Really Means

What, then, would it mean to “wind down” a war after Natanz and Bushehr, after drones over desalination plants and missiles at Diego Garcia? In the narrow sense used in briefing rooms, it means reaching a point where daily strike counts fall, ceasefire language appears in communiqués, and presidents can credibly tell voters that the worst is behind them. In the broader sense that matters for anyone who has to live in the blast radius of these decisions, it means something darker.

It means accepting that the taboo on hitting nuclear‑related sites has been broken, and that the next confrontation—whether with Iran or another state—will start from that new baseline, not the old one. It means conceding that desalination plants, once treated as quasi‑civilian humanitarian infrastructure, are now understood by planners as legitimate leverage over hostile governments: turn off the taps from 200 kilometers away and see which government blinks first. It means normalizing a war logic that treats the last‑resort systems of a heating, drying region as bargaining chips in short political cycles.

There is, still, another path. A coalition that genuinely cared about preventing nuclear catastrophe and mass displacement in a warming Middle East would be using this crisis to harden safety norms, pull nuclear and water infrastructure out of the target set, and accelerate a planned contraction of fossil‑fuel dependence while protecting the basic needs of those least able to pay. That would look like de‑escalation tethered to disarmament, rationing as policy rather than as fallout, and investment in resilience that was not just a new market for security firms and consultancies.

The path we are on looks different. It uses the language of winding down to describe a situation in which the most sensitive parts of the regional infrastructure have been pulled into the arena, tried out as tools of pressure, and left there for the next round. It treats nuclear and water facilities as expendable coordinates on targeting maps rather than as collective red lines in an age when extreme heat and scarcity are no longer hypothetical. It shows, more clearly than any report or model could, what it means to fight wars inside an already ongoing collapse.

In the previous essay, the cable that snapped was the one holding up the global energy bridge. In this one, the strands giving way are the ones most people never see: the rods in reactor cores, the intake pipes of desalination plants, the invisible limit between a body that can sweat out a Gulf summer and one that cannot. You can halt the strikes, but you can’t call back what they’ve set in motion. Whatever official communiqués say in the coming weeks, the war over how—and over whom—this system will fall is nowhere near winding down.

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Epic Fury And The Unraveling Of The Energy World‑System

20 Friday Mar 2026

Posted by xraymike79 in Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Mental Health

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Collapse Of Complex Societies, Demand Destruction Dynamics, Elite Overproduction, Energy Infrastructure Warfare, Energy Security Crisis, Fossil Fuel Endgame, Geopolitics Of Energy, Global Energy Markets, Gulf Monarchies Blowback, Iran Israel Conflict, Limits To Growth, LNG Supply Shock, Managed Collapse, Militarization Of Trade Routes, Oil Price Regime, Operation Epic Fury, Overshoot And Decline, Rationing And Austerity, Rules Based Order, Strait Of Hormuz

In my last essay, I argued that the Israel–Iran war crossed a threshold when Israeli jets hit Iran’s South Pars gas field and Iranian missiles answered by crippling liquefaction trains at Qatar’s Ras Laffan hub. It was the moment the conflict shifted from rattling chokepoints to cutting into the load‑bearing cables of the global energy system. Since then, three things have changed. The attacks have spread laterally from one set of facilities to an entire layer of regional redundancy. The outlines of a multi‑year price and rationing regime are emerging from under the noise. And the political coalition that launched “Epic Fury” is starting to saw through its own lifelines in public.

After the First Cable Snaps

South Pars and Ras Laffan were never just symbols. Together they tap the world’s largest known gas reservoir and power much of the modern economy’s invisible scaffolding: electricity generation in Europe, winter heating from Tokyo to Turin, fertilizer plants that keep harvests high in Asia and Latin America, petrochemical complexes that turn gas into plastics and fuels. When jets and missiles punched holes in that apparatus, it was not just Iran and Qatar that took the hit. It was the idea that the deepest parts of the energy system were off‑limits—a shared, apolitical foundation beneath the usual games at straits and canals.

In those first days, officials still talked as if this were an aberration that could be patched: repairs in months, maybe a tough winter or two, then back to “normal.” The developments since have stripped away that pretense. What looked like a one‑off strike has turned into a campaign against redundancy. What was sold as a contained operation has started to look like a live‑fire demonstration of how you turn a high‑energy civilization into something leaner, meaner, and more unequal, by design or by drift.

From One Strike to a Campaign Against Redundancy

South Pars and Ras Laffan were the turning point—the moment the war stopped rattling chokepoints and started cutting into the main cables. Since then, the strikes have spread sideways across the map and downward into the backup systems that were supposed to keep the bridge standing when something went wrong.

The Ras Laffan numbers are now out in the open. Qatar’s own executives admit that two liquefaction trains and a major gas‑to‑liquids plant are damaged badly enough that they will be offline for three to five years, taking roughly 12–13 million tonnes of LNG exports with them—about 17 percent of Qatar’s capacity and close to a fifth of seaborne LNG in a normal year. You can argue about the precise percentages, but not about the direction of travel: this is not capacity that comes back with a patch and a restart; it requires a full industrial rebuild on a ticking clock.

What makes the second phase different is that Iran and its adversaries have not stopped at the obvious crown jewels. Iranian drones have now set fire to Kuwait’s Mina al‑Ahmadi refinery in successive attacks, forcing partial shutdowns at one of the giant downstream hubs that turn crude into usable fuels and feed regional exports. Saudi infrastructure at Yanbu—the Red Sea outlet that lets the kingdom bypass a closed Strait of Hormuz—has been hit as well, and shipping insurance for any route that touches the northern Gulf has become a moving target. Instead of a clean duel between one gas field and another, the damage is spreading across refineries, export terminals, and bypass pipelines: the very redundancy that planners built after earlier crises is being pulled into the target set.

The picture around Hormuz itself captures this shift from “event” to systemic injury. Officially, everyone still talks about “reopening” the strait once enough missile sites have been bombed and enough patrols assembled. Unofficially, there are as many as 2,500 ships backed up in and around the chokepoint, with over 20,000 people stranded aboard them because there is nowhere safe to dock and, in many cases, no fuel left to move even if the all‑clear is given. Clearing that kind of backlog is not like lifting a toll gate. Each hull needs to be refueled, re‑provisioned with water and food, inspected, and slotted into a global port network that is itself jammed and risk‑averse.

That is why the reflexive little dips in oil prices every time an official hints that “we’re about to get the strait open” feel so detached from reality. Markets still want to treat Hormuz as a binary switch: closed, then open, and the world goes back to normal. In the physical world, reopening after weeks or months of blockade is its own kind of shock. Tankers and LNG carriers do not teleport from anchorage to destination. They burn bunker fuel to crawl out of a war zone into ports that may not want them, with crews who have been living on the edge of exhaustion and shortage. The war’s second phase is not just about new targets; it is about discovering how deeply the damage runs when you stop harassing the flow and start wrecking the alternatives.

A New Price Regime, Not a Spike

The comforting story from the first days of the war was that this was a price spike—a nasty one, but still the kind of thing that strategic reserves, a bit of demand restraint, and some diplomatic choreography could smooth out. That story is dying by the minute.

Saudi Arabia’s own modeling now assumes that if the war and the effective closure of Hormuz persist through late April, oil prices could climb through 130 and 150 dollars a barrel and head toward 165 or even 180 in the weeks that follow. Analysts at big consultancies say 200 is not out of the question this year if enough capacity stays offline and enough tankers remain stranded or uninsured. These are not activist fantasies; they are the internal scenarios of the world’s swing producer and the firms paid to advise its customers.​

Riyadh’s fear is not just volatility. It is demand destruction—the point at which airlines ground planes, trucking companies park rigs, households cancel trips and cut consumption, and the habits that made high demand possible erode for good. A kingdom that built its long‑term plan on selling large volumes of oil at medium‑high prices does not want to be remembered as the profiteer of an energy war it did not start, or as the regime that helped push its best customers into recession and long‑term substitution.​

On the gas side, the horizon is even starker. Losing roughly 20 percent of the global LNG seaborne trade for three to five years is not a “tight market.” It is a structural break. Officials who spent the last few winters assuring Europe and parts of Asia that diversification away from Russian pipelines and the build‑out of flexible LNG had solved the worst of their vulnerability are now talking, mostly off camera, about electricity rationing, three‑ to four‑fold jumps in power bills, and rolling shutdowns of energy‑intensive industry as a normal condition rather than a freak season.

In response, governments are doing what they always do when the headlines get too close to the pump price. They are borrowing from the future. Strategic reserves are being drawn down to keep front‑page benchmarks under the politically toxic line of 100 dollars a barrel. Subsidies and tax holidays prop up retail fuel prices. Regulators lean on refiners and utilities to absorb more of the pain. Each of those moves buys a little time and a few approval points now by pushing the adjustment further out—and making it harsher when it comes.

That is why even the U.S. Energy Information Administration, not known for alarmism, is now projecting elevated oil prices through at least the end of next year. If you hold prices down artificially in the middle of a physical shortage, you do not make the shortage go away. You stretch it. You encourage people to keep behaving as if the old energy world still exists, until the gap between expectation and reality is wide enough that only rationing, recession, or both can close it.

Even establishment analysts now describe the situation as putting global energy markets “on the brink of a worst‑case scenario,” an unprecedented crisis in oil and gas supply that will eventually wash through every corner of the world.

Seen from this angle, the Iran war is not a shock in the sense markets like to use the word, a temporary displacement around a stable trend line. It is the opening stage of a new price regime: one where high and volatile energy costs are the background condition of economic life, and where “normal” means a permanent scramble to decide who gets how much of a shrinking, weaponized flow.

A Coalition at War With Its Own Lifelines

The strangest part of this moment is not that infrastructure is burning. It is how casually the governments that ordered the strikes talk about what comes next.

When the United States and Israel launched “Operation Epic Fury,” their rhetoric was all about resolve and clarity. Trump promised to destroy Iran’s missile program, sink its navy, neutralize its allies, and guarantee it could never acquire nuclear weapons. Netanyahu framed the campaign as the long‑deferred chance to break an enemy he had spent his entire career fighting. Both men hinted at regime change without quite saying the words, confident that the war could be kept short and the economic pain manageable.​

South Pars broke that script. When Israeli jets hit the Iranian half of the world’s largest gas field, Trump rushed to insist that Washington “knew nothing” about the operation and that Qatar—a close U.S. partner and co‑owner of the reservoir—was “in no way, shape, or form” involved. U.S. officials quickly told reporters that this was not quite true: Israel had informed the United States in advance, even if it had not asked for direct help. The attempt to distance Washington from the most economically consequential strike of the war was a tell. Trump wanted the image of decisive force without the blame for blowing holes in the global gas system.​

As Iranian missiles tore into Ras Laffan and Gulf facilities in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, those tensions surfaced more openly. Joe Kent, Trump’s counterterrorism chief, resigned in protest, writing that the United States had been dragged into another Middle East war under pressure from Israel and its domestic lobby. In Congress, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard acknowledged that the objectives laid out by Trump and the goals of the Israeli government were not the same. The alliance that presented a united front in week one now looked more like two overlapping wars: one U.S. campaign to degrade Iran’s hard power and signal resolve, and one Israeli campaign to grind down an adversary’s state, security forces, and economy as far as possible.​

Netanyahu has little incentive to stop. Polls show overwhelming support among Jewish Israelis for continuing the war until the regime in Tehran falls. Israeli jets have struck Revolutionary Guard headquarters, police and Basij checkpoints, and emergency shelters for paramilitaries, killing thousands of security personnel and unknown numbers of civilians. The same air force has also helped unleash clouds of toxic smoke and acid rain over Iranian cities by hitting refineries and storage depots, with long‑term health costs that will never show up on any ledger.

Yet for all that, the assumption that sustained bombing will quickly crack Iran’s system looks increasingly detached from the country’s actual character. Decades of sanctions that restricted access to critical materials, electronics, and even medicines forced Iran to build a broad domestic industrial base: steel, engines, diesel, pharmaceuticals. It is not autarkic, but it is far more self‑reliant than most of its neighbors, with a large pool of engineers, scientists, and lawyers and a university population that is majority female. This is not a fragile petro‑monarchy held together by imported expertise; it is a sanctions‑hardened society that has learned to make do and make things.

On top of that, the old asymmetries of power are eroding at the tactical level. Iranian air defenses that Trump boasted of having “destroyed” have now managed to detect, lock on to, and hit at least one F‑35—the “unkillable” stealth jet that had never been struck in combat before—with Tehran claiming a crash and U.S. officials conceding an emergency landing, and reports of a second hit over Bandar Abbas. From Iran’s point of view, bringing a hundred‑million‑dollar symbol of U.S. dominance down with a far cheaper missile is not just a propaganda coup; it is proof that the old return‑on‑investment logic of American air supremacy is tilting against Washington.

Strip away the personalities and this is what remains: a coalition that depends, like every modern state, on vast, cheap, reliable flows of oil and gas is deliberately degrading those flows in the name of security. Iran, facing a leadership even more hard‑line after assassinations and bombardment, is doing the same to its neighbors’ assets. Every new strike on a gas plant, refinery, or bypass pipeline is another cut to the cables that hold up the world‑system both sides claim they want to lead.

Overshoot With Missiles: Collapse Theory Meets Epic Fury

None of this will surprise anyone who has been paying attention to the old literature on overshoot and collapse. The point of the original Limits to Growth work was not that the world would “run out” of oil or copper on a specific date. It was that exponential growth on a finite planet pushes societies into a state where their demands on ecosystems and resources exceed what those systems can sustain. If they do not deliberately slow down and redesign, correction arrives in uglier ways: through a combination of resource stress, ecological damage, and institutional failure.

Subsequent work by people like Dennis Meadows, Joseph Tainter, and Peter Turchin added more texture. Tainter emphasized how complex societies become brittle when the returns on added complexity—new bureaucracies, new infrastructures, new layers of control—diminish, but their maintenance costs keep rising. Turchin mapped how elite overproduction and factional conflict erode state capacity just as external pressures mount. Together, they sketched a picture of civilizations that fail not only because they hit external limits, but because their elites, faced with constraint, double down on self‑defeating strategies.​

The Iran war is what that looks like in our century. Overshoot is no longer hypothetical; by any reasonable measure, we have already blown past safe levels of material throughput and ecological impact. The question was always how the descent would be managed. This war offers one answer: not with planned contraction and protection of the vulnerable, but with energy wars that accelerate decline while masking it as strength.

Instead of letting depletion and climate damage slowly tighten the screws, states are blowing up each other’s ability to keep high‑energy life going. Instead of using what remains of the fossil era to build a softer landing, they are using it to power missile factories, bomber fleets, and propaganda machines. Even in the air war, the old assumptions are fraying: Iranian air defenses that were supposed to have been “decimated” have now managed to hit the F‑35, the crowning jewel of U.S. air power, with relatively low‑cost missiles, turning a hundred‑million‑dollar stealth platform into just another vulnerable asset over Bandar Abbas. The German military’s old peak‑oil scenarios warned that once energy costs consumed more than a certain share of GDP, recessions and instability would become chronic, not cyclical. We are heading into that zone with our foot on the accelerator.​

The Uneven Geography of the First Global Rationing War

From a distance, it is easy to get lost in shipping maps and price charts. Up close, the war’s logic is being written into electricity bills, grocery prices, and rationing plans.

In Europe and parts of East Asia, the same officials who boasted of “energy security” after diversifying away from Russian gas are now gaming out winters of rolling blackouts, mandated demand cuts, and three‑ or four‑fold increases in household power costs. Decisions about which industries get priority access to gas and electricity—chemicals, steel, autos, data centers—are becoming matters of national strategy rather than routine regulation. The social bargain that underpinned the European Union’s technocratic politics was premised on abundant, reasonably cheap energy. That premise is dissolving.

In poorer, energy‑importing states, the choices are crueler. Governments in South Asia, North Africa, and parts of sub‑Saharan Africa are being forced to decide whether to pay for LNG and oil at crisis prices, pay for fertilizer to keep harvests up, or pay foreign creditors to avoid default. They cannot do all three. The international financial institutions that present themselves as shock absorbers will, in practice, turn up as collection agencies for bondholders and gas suppliers, offering loans and rollovers in exchange for austerity measures that cut deepest into already‑thin safety nets.​​

The Gulf monarchies are not exempt from the blowback, even if most of them did not ask for this escalation. Saudi Arabia, which pushed hardest for a tougher line on Iran, now finds itself modeling oil at 150–180 dollars with all the recession and demand‑destruction risks that implies. Qatar, Kuwait, and the UAE are discovering what it means to have refineries, gas fields, and export terminals turned into declared targets, with reconstruction and defense costs eating into the hydrocarbon rents that financed subsidies and public jobs. However they positioned themselves at the outset, they are now being forced to decide whether to pass the pain on to their own populations or quietly accept a thinner cushion and a more brittle social bargain.

In the United States, which likes to imagine itself insulated by domestic production, the shock is already present in more mundane ways. Diesel and gasoline prices have jumped fastest in the interior states tied to Gulf Coast refining and long‑haul trucking routes. For many households, that means longer drives that cost more, higher food prices, and local governments told there is no money for anything but police, prisons, and patchwork road repair. As in previous energy crises, the temptation will be to displace the anger: blame environmentalists, immigrants, foreign enemies, anyone but the leaders who chose to fire missiles into the heart of the energy system.​

This is why it is not quite right to call what is unfolding an “oil shock” or a “gas crisis.” Those phrases suggest temporary disruptions in a system that will eventually re‑equilibrate. What we are watching instead is the earliest stage of a global rationing war: a period in which access to energy is allocated through a mix of price, force, and geopolitics, and in which whole swaths of humanity are quietly written out of the future that cheap hydrocarbons briefly made possible.

Managed Descent or Permanent Emergency

There is still a choice, but it is narrowing.

One path, mostly theoretical so far, would treat this war as a last, brutal warning. Rich countries could decide that trying to preserve their current level of energy use is a losing game, and begin a managed descent: deliberate reductions in consumption at the top, protection of basic needs for the bottom and the middle, and aggressive restructuring of food, transport, and housing systems around lower throughput. It would mean rationing, but rationing as policy rather than as a side‑effect of missile strikes and credit limits.

The path we are on looks very different. It treats each escalation as an aberration even as the aberrations become the norm. It uses strategic reserves and subsidies to postpone price recognition, then deploys central banks and riot police when the bill comes due. It defines “law and order” as the ability of states to manage permanent crisis on behalf of those still connected to the remaining lifelines, while everyone else is left to navigate blackouts, food inflation, and debt collectors.

In my previous essay, I said we had crossed from threatening chokepoints to cutting cables, and we are now being shown what that means in practice. The cables can be cut faster than they can be repaired. The people in charge of the shears are more afraid of losing face than of losing the bridge. And the rest of us are learning what it feels like to live in a world‑system whose rulers have decided that if they cannot steer it forever, they are at least entitled to decide how—and over whom—it falls.

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The War That Turns the Lights Off

19 Thursday Mar 2026

Posted by xraymike79 in Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Mental Health

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Civilizational Overshoot, Empire And Fossil Fuels, Energy Infrastructure Warfare, Financial System Fragility, Geopolitics Of Oil And Gas, Global Energy Chokepoints, Insurance And Actuarial Warfare, Iran War Escalation, Limits To Growth, Liquefied Natural Gas Markets, Managed Versus Forced Degrowth, Ras Laffan Industrial City, Rules Based Order Crisis, South Pars Gas Field, Strategic Bombing Of Infrastructure, Weaponization Of Supply Chains

There is a difference between threatening a chokepoint and bombing the cables that hold the bridge up. Over the past week, the Iran war has crossed that line. What began as another grisly, “manageable” conflict on the edges of the global economy is turning into something else: an open season on the energy infrastructure that keeps the lights on, the food moving, and the financial system papered over.

Israel’s decision to strike Iran’s South Pars gas field was the tipping point. South Pars is not just another target on a map. It is one half of the largest natural gas field on Earth, shared with Qatar, and the backbone of Iran’s domestic energy supply. When Israeli aircraft hit processing facilities at Assaluyeh, they were not simply hitting a symbol of the Islamic Republic’s wealth. They were signaling that even the deepest load‑bearing parts of the regional energy system are no longer off limits.

Iran’s response followed the logic it had advertised for months. Missiles and drones went out across the Gulf not just toward bases and radar sites, but toward the Shah gas field in the UAE, refineries in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, and—most consequentially—Qatar’s Ras Laffan industrial city. Ras Laffan is one of the main nodes in the global gas system: a complex of liquefaction trains, storage tanks, and pipelines that helps make Qatar one of the world’s biggest LNG exporters. After the strikes, QatarEnergy confirmed what the smoke already suggested. Two liquefaction trains and a gas‑to‑liquids plant suffered serious damage; roughly 17 percent of Qatar’s LNG export capacity has been knocked out for three to five years. Force majeure looms over long‑term contracts from Europe to East Asia. Tens of billions in expected revenue have evaporated, along with a non‑trivial slice of the world’s flexible gas supply.

Markets did what markets do when they finally glimpse the physical world under the spreadsheets. Brent crude, which sat below 75 dollars a barrel on the eve of the war, has been shoved above 110 and briefly toward 119 as traders try to price in both damage and risk. European benchmark gas prices have jumped by double digits in a single day on the Ras Laffan and South Pars news. Analysts who a month ago were still talking about “temporary disruptions” now concede that if Iran works through the target list it has circulated—naming specific Saudi, Emirati, and Qatari facilities as “direct and legitimate targets”—this will be a supply shock measured in years, not weeks.

One of the most revealing things about this latest phase is not just what happened, but how leaders talk about it.

Iran’s foreign minister now promises “zero restraint” if more of its infrastructure is struck, implying that the previous wave of attacks on Gulf energy sites used only a fraction of Iran’s capabilities. In Washington, Donald Trump insists the United States “knew nothing” of Israel’s South Pars strike, even as reporting and regional analysis suggest U.S. officials were informed in advance. Almost in the same breath, he threatens that if Iran hits Qatar’s LNG infrastructure again, the U.S. will “massively blow up” the entirety of South Pars “at an amount of strength and power that Iran has never seen.”

What is being said out loud here is extraordinary. Allies casually drag each other into attacks on each other’s critical infrastructure while denying foreknowledge. A sitting U.S. president promises, on social media and then in briefings, to annihilate a core piece of the world’s gas system as punishment for attacks on a third country’s energy hubs. Iran lists major facilities in Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Qatar as “direct and legitimate targets” and begins hitting them.

This is the rules‑based order in our current, perverse reality: great powers claiming legal and moral cover to destroy assets that keep billions of people clothed, fed, and warm, then backfilling the justification later.

Strip away the rhetoric and the pattern is plain. One ally attacked the world’s largest gas field. The other retaliated against its neighbors’ gas fields and export hubs. Washington now holds a loaded gun to the same reservoir that underpins its allies’ energy security and much of the world’s industrial metabolism. South Pars and Ras Laffan are no longer neutral infrastructure in a supposedly apolitical marketplace. They are hostages.

Nothing on this scale has happened before. Past oil shocks burned Kuwaiti wells, closed canals, or harassed tankers, but left the core of multiple producers’ upstream systems intact and repairable in months rather than years. Today’s campaign goes straight for the main nodes of the global gas and oil machine, disabling a large slice of Qatar’s LNG capacity for years and threatening to keep a historic share of Gulf crude and gas effectively offline. It is not just another scare at a chokepoint. It is the first time the suspension cables of the energy system themselves are being systematically cut.

If escalation continues, the consequences will not be confined to the Gulf. The global energy system is not a smooth “web” of countless interchangeable paths. As I explained in my prior essay, it is closer to a suspension bridge: a vast, vibrating deck of modern life hanging from a few main cables. Ras Laffan, South Pars, Abqaiq, Jubail, Kharg Island—these are some of the strands. Cut out enough capacity for long enough and the world does not simply “adjust.” It reverts.

In the near term, a grinding energy emergency becomes the background condition of economic life rather than a headline event. Some flows will be rerouted. U.S. and Australian LNG exporters will run harder. Additional oil will be coaxed from other basins. Tankers will shift to longer, more expensive routes as insurers and shipowners recalculate what they are willing to risk through Hormuz and its neighboring seas. But you cannot reroute capacity that no longer exists. Destroyed liquefaction trains in Qatar and damaged upstream assets elsewhere represent not just lost volumes, but lost flexibility—the ability to respond to cold winters, drought‑driven hydropower shortfalls, nuclear outages, and everything else that pushed Europe into crisis in 2022 and 2023.

Repair, too, is not a matter of flipping a switch when the shooting stops. Iraq’s experience after the 2003 invasion showed how hard it is to bring complex energy infrastructure back from wartime damage even when contractors, engineers, and billions in funding have relatively free access: production consistently lagged behind optimistic projections and was dogged by sabotage, corruption, and missing parts. Ukraine’s struggle to keep its power grid functioning under Russian attack has underlined how supply chains for large transformers, high‑voltage switchgear, and other specialized components become chokepoints in their own right, with one‑ to two‑year lead times and persistent re‑strikes on repaired nodes. Qatar’s own executives are now talking about three to five years to restore the destroyed capacity at Ras Laffan. Those are optimistic estimates offered for calm readers. They assume the plants are not hit again.

The human translation of “three to five years” is not abstract. Higher gas and oil prices feed straight into fertilizer costs, shipping rates, and electricity bills. For rich countries, that means another round of inflation, central banks posing as spectators of events they quietly helped set up, and politicians explaining to the public why they must tighten belts again in the name of “stability.” For poorer, import‑dependent countries, it means something closer to triage. The IMF has already warned that costly energy, war, and climate shocks together are likely to keep global food prices elevated, with the heaviest burden falling on low‑income, food‑importing states that spend a large share of income on staples. When fertilizer and fuel costs spike, governments from North Africa to South Asia find themselves juggling fuel contracts, grain imports, and debt service, while telling their populations that blackouts, rationing, and austerity are unavoidable.

The global rule set will adjust as well, but not in the direction its authors like to imagine. Once Israel, Iran, and potentially the United States have all hit each other’s critical energy infrastructure while defending those strikes as legitimate, the taboo is broken. Legal experts and policy analysts were already warning, over Russian attacks on Ukrainian power stations and Israeli bombing of Gaza’s basic lifelines, that the post‑1945 norm against deliberate targeting of civilian infrastructure was eroding behind a cloud of claims that power plants, pipelines, and water systems were “dual‑use” targets—supposedly civilian and military at once—and therefore legitimate to destroy in the name of “military necessity.” The Gulf energy war accelerates that process. Future rivals will remember that when energy flowed through contested regions, it was not only sanctions and cyber sabotage on the table, but outright destruction of shared lifelines.

At home, governments will respond by expanding emergency powers that had once been reserved for rare, discrete crises. Rationing regimes, mandatory demand reductions, intensified surveillance of “critical infrastructure,” and the deployment of troops to guard refineries and ports will be rolled out as temporary measures and then linger as permanent architecture. In wealthy states, this will be wrapped in the language of “resilience” and “homeland security.” In poorer ones, it will be defended as the price of avoiding outright famine and state failure.

Abroad, institutions built to smooth shocks—the IMF, World Bank, regional development banks—will act as collection agencies in a world where repeated infrastructure attacks keep debtor states from ever getting fully back on their feet. The language will remain “restoring stability” and “supporting reform.” The reality will be managing a slow‑motion contraction, with conditional loans and austerity programs imposed on societies already hammered by higher energy and food costs.

Most of the people who will live inside this emerging order do not care which air force hit which compressor station. They care whether their lights stay on and their paychecks buy food. In Gulf monarchies whose social peace has been bought with energy‑funded subsidies and jobs, repeated hits on gas fields and export hubs will strain the bargains that have kept absolute rulers in place. When revenues fall and rebuilding soaks up cash, rulers will be tempted to cut benefits and public employment at the margins that matter most to the poor and to migrant workers. Elsewhere—from the informal neighborhoods of Lagos to the townships of Pakistan to small towns in the American interior—higher fuel and food prices will arrive on top of climate shocks and existing austerity. The temptation for rulers everywhere will be the same: redirect anger toward convenient enemies, wrap contraction in the flag, and harden the state’s capacity to put down unrest.

In one sense, none of this is new. For decades, the “rules‑based order” has allowed powerful states to weaponize payment systems, sanctions, and financial plumbing—shutting countries out of dollar clearing, freezing reserves, starving economies of credit. What is new is the open normalization of kinetic attacks on the physical systems that make global life possible, not as a last resort but as a routine instrument of policy. Insurance letters and naval patrols were already turning chokepoints like the Strait of Hormuz into de facto levers of imperial power. Now missiles are following.

From a distance, this is exactly the kind of convergence the old limits‑to‑growth and collapse theorists tried to warn about. They argued that complex, high‑energy societies push into overshoot by piling ever more infrastructure and interdependence onto finite resource flows, until shocks hit the load‑bearing parts of the system and complexity starts to run in reverse. On their charts, it looked like smooth curves for industrial output, food, and population bending gently down after a peak. In our world, it looks like something cruder: missiles punching holes in gas fields and cable corridors, insurance markets refusing to cover whole regions, and governments discovering that “demand destruction” is just a polite phrase for forced reductions in consumption. You still get less energy burned, fewer flights taken, fewer goods shipped—but through blackouts and mandatory rationing, not through planned transition. The question is no longer whether modern civilization will shrink its material footprint. It is whether that contraction will be distributed, negotiated, and humane, or imposed from above and outside by a tightening ring of chokepoints and a thinning cushion of surplus.

Most popular visions of collapse still imagine a singular cliff: some abrupt tipping point in climate, a sudden exhaustion of resources, a generalized “systems failure” that comes from everywhere at once. The reality now taking shape is more legible and more cruel. Step by step, the war spreads from runways and radar domes to the valves, cables, and pipes that keep modern life possible. Each round of escalation cuts a little more slack out of the system and normalizes tactics that once would have been off the table. Each year of elevated prices and intermittent shortages pushes another rung of society closer to being permanently left behind.

If nothing changes in the political calculus of the actors now trading blows—from Tel Aviv and Tehran to Washington and Doha—this is the trajectory we are on. A world where energy is scarcer, risk‑priced, and routinely weaponized. A world where “law and order” means managing permanent crisis on behalf of those still connected to the remaining lifelines. A world where collapse is not a single event but a series of sharp blows to overloaded cables and the uneven, cascading fall of everything that was hanging from them.

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Networks, Chokepoints, and Falling Dominoes

18 Wednesday Mar 2026

Posted by xraymike79 in Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Mental Health

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Tags

Actuarial Power, Asymmetric Warfare, Chokepoint Warfare, Critical Infrastructure, Economic Contagion, Energy Geopolitics, Energy Security, Financial Derivatives, Global South Blackouts, Imperial Overreach, Infrastructural Violence, Insurance Capital, Late Industrial Modernity, Maritime Straits, Network Fragility, Oil Empire, Strait Of Hormuz, Supply Chain Risk, Systems Collapse, Technocratic Governance

Modernity at the Chokepoints

What does it look like when a civilization ties its survival to a handful of narrow straits, buried cables, cloud clusters, and chemical plants—and then starts sawing at them in a fit of imperial politics and wishful thinking?

We are used to talking about “complex systems” and “global interdependence” as if redundancy comes for free. The picture in our heads is a web: many nodes, many links, no single point of failure. But that is not the world we have actually built. What we have is closer to a suspension bridge: a vast weight hanging from a few load‑bearing cables. The Strait of Hormuz. Gulf Coast refineries and LNG terminals. A couple of global fertilizer giants. Three cloud providers. A sparse grid of undersea fiber. A handful of global dollar‑clearing banks.

When those cables fray—through war, sanctions, climate shocks, or cyber sabotage—the deck does not sag gracefully. It drops.

The Strait That Moves the World

Start with the obvious: oil and gas.

On a map, the Strait of Hormuz is a narrow cut between Iran and Oman: 21 miles wide, two shipping lanes in, two shipping lanes out, plus a buffer. In energy reality, it is the throat through which roughly a fifth of globally traded crude and an enormous share of liquefied natural gas pass on their way to Asia and Europe. Close it, even partially, and a local skirmish in a narrow strait becomes a global energy shock, ripping through fuel prices, freight costs, and food bills in every time zone.

As we have already discussed, the current Iran war has made that concrete. Mines and anti‑ship missiles in and around Hormuz do not have to stop every tanker. They only have to raise the perceived risk high enough that insurers pull coverage, shippers refuse cargoes, and navies escort only the most politically essential flows. A two‑ or three‑million‑barrel‑per‑day disruption for weeks is enough to send oil into triple digits and LNG into panic territory. A deeper, longer shock starts to look less like a “market dislocation” and more like enforced rationing: governments diverting scarce fuel to militaries and critical infrastructure, leaving households and small businesses to absorb the hit.

We have seen sketches of this before: the tanker wars of the 1980s, the price spike after Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait, the crunch that followed Russia’s full‑scale invasion of Ukraine. What is different now is the degree of concentration. Over the past two decades, as majors chased shareholder returns and states leaned on “just in time” trade, spare capacity and geographic diversity have withered. Fewer refineries. Bigger tankers. More gas tied up in slow‑moving LNG fleets. Less slack in storage.

A civilization that still runs its transport, agriculture, plastics, and much of its grid on hydrocarbons has chosen to confine an ever‑larger share of that metabolism to a few maritime chokepoints. Hormuz is the most dramatic, but not the only one. The Strait of Malacca, Bab el‑Mandeb, the Turkish Straits: each is a place where bottleneck geography and dense energy traffic now sit directly on top of each other. Each is a point where a regional war, a blockade, or even a credible threat can pull on cables that run into every supermarket and hospital on earth.

Food on a Single Chain

If energy is the master resource, food is the one that turns abstraction into panic. Here, too, what we call a “network” is really a handful of suspension ropes with everything hanging from them.

Global grain and oilseed markets depend heavily on a few “breadbaskets”: the U.S. Midwest, the Black Sea, Brazil and Argentina, parts of India and China. In a stable climate, localized drought in one region can be smoothed by surplus elsewhere. In a destabilized climate, that comforting picture starts to fail. Extreme heat, droughts, and floods are increasingly synchronized across regions by planetary‑scale shifts in jet streams and ocean currents. Researchers have a phrase for what happens when these patterns line up the wrong way: multiple breadbasket failure. Instead of one bad harvest, you get several at once.

The building blocks are already visible. Heat domes over North America, unprecedented drought in the Horn of Africa, flooded fields in Pakistan and along the Yangtze: each of these has happened in isolation. Put two or three together in the same growing season, layered on top of depleted grain stocks and already‑high prices, and you are no longer talking about localized hunger. You are talking about systemic scarcity.

And that is before you trace the chain upstream. Modern agriculture does not run on rain and muscle. It runs on fossil‑fuel‑derived fertilizers, diesel for tractors and harvesters, gas‑fired power for irrigation pumps, refrigerated logistics, and global shipping. Ammonia plants that turn natural gas into nitrogen fertilizer are chokepoints every bit as crucial as straits. So are export terminals on the Black Sea and Gulf Coast, and the small handful of companies that dominate grain trading. When energy prices spike, or when sanctions and war interrupt flows through a corridor like the Black Sea, the effect is not just a headline about “higher prices.” It is households in importing countries quietly dropping meat from their diets, then eggs, then fresh vegetables, then calories.

In theory, a diversified civilization could absorb such shocks. In practice, the food system has followed the same logic as energy: consolidation, scale, and efficiency first; resilience later, maybe. Fields planted fence‑to‑fence with a single crop variety; animals raised in vast confinement operations that depend on continuous feed deliveries; supermarket chains with centralized distribution centers and minimal backroom storage.

The result is that it does not take an end‑of‑the‑world drought to stress the system. A few failed harvests, a fertilizer crunch, or a war that chokes a critical export route are enough to push tens or hundreds of millions of people out of food security and into some combination of malnutrition, migration, and revolt.

The Cloud Under Our Feet

If oil and grain are visible chokepoints, the digital ones are largely invisible. They are no less real.

Every time you tap a card, check a lab result, book a truck, or dispatch an ambulance, you are depending on computers that live somewhere else. For a while, we were happy to regard “the cloud” as a comforting abstraction. Now it is a specific handful of hyperscale data centers, network backbones, authentication services, and software supply chains—each operating under the control of a few firms and, ultimately, a few states.

Hospitals, water utilities, electricity system operators, ports, railroads, and refineries increasingly run their operations through cloud‑hosted platforms and common software libraries. Identity and access management is outsourced to third‑party providers. Billing systems, maintenance logs, and industrial control interfaces sit behind the same handful of login pages. It is efficient, standardized, and—until it fails—invisible.

We already have hints of what a serious digital chokepoint failure looks like. Ransomware and supply‑chain attacks that encrypt hospital networks and force staff back onto paper. Payment system outages that strand travelers and jam supermarkets. Software bugs in a widely used library that propagate out into thousands of organizations at once. These are early warnings, not worst‑case scenarios.

The lesson from Stuxnet and the Ukraine grid attacks is that determined states can target not just the accounting layer, but the control layer: the switches and valves and breakers that keep electricity, water, and fuel moving. Code can blind operators, feed them fake readings, run equipment to failure, and trigger blackouts at the grid level. As more of the world’s critical infrastructure is wired into shared digital ecosystems—common protocols, shared platforms, centralized monitoring—the distance between “a cyber incident at a vendor” and “no power in a third of the country” shrinks.

We are building something much like the energy and food systems: vast complexity perched on top of a small number of concentrated, opaque, and mutually entangled cores.

Signals from the Cables and the Grid

If you want to see this fragility in pure form, you do not have to look at tankers or grain silos. You can look under the sea and into the wires.

The undersea‑cable grid that carries nearly all international internet traffic is marketed as a redundant mesh. In practice, much of Asia, the Gulf, and East Africa now rely on a few busy corridors where dozens of cables are bunched together on the seafloor. When several cables in the Red Sea were cut recently—most likely by wayward anchors rather than deliberate intent—connectivity across parts of the Middle East and South Asia degraded in hours, and traffic had to be hurriedly rerouted thousands of miles around Africa. A few severed fibers in a contested chokepoint turned into slower payments, dropped calls, and stalled business on multiple continents, with nobody quite sure whether it was an accident, an attack, or something in between.

On land, the electrical grid is undergoing a similar stress test. Growing fleets of data centers, AI clusters, and electrified everything are pushing peak demand up faster than new firm capacity and transmission are being built. At the same time, extreme weather—heat domes, polar outbreaks, inland hurricanes—is hammering aging lines and transformers that were installed decades ago for a milder climate and a flatter load curve. Each year, reliability assessments quietly expand the list of regions at “elevated risk” of rolling blackouts if a cold snap or heat wave hits at the wrong moment. The supply of electrons still looks adequate on annual spreadsheets. The real fragility shows up in the hour‑to‑hour choreography needed to keep a sprawling, under‑maintained machine balanced on the edge of collapse.

Critical to Whom?

States and corporations are not blind to any of this. They simply draw different conclusions.

Security assessments now openly talk about “globally critical infrastructure”: assets and corridors whose loss would have cascading international effects. Government studies list familiar categories—energy, transport, communications, finance, health, food—and then note, in careful language, that these systems are aging, increasingly digitized, more exposed to climate extremes, and deeply interdependent. Corporate risk reports use phrases like “concentration risk” to describe the financial exposure that comes from relying on a handful of providers for cloud services, logistics, or payments.

Then, in the next breath, policy and business practice push further in the same direction. Ports are privatized and consolidated, refineries mothballed in favor of efficient mega‑plants. Cloud workloads are migrated to one or two platforms because vendor diversity is “too complex.” Fertilizer and seed markets are allowed to coalesce into a few global players because that is what the spreadsheets demand.

From the perspective of a balance sheet, this makes sense. Fixed costs fall. Margins rise. From the perspective of a civilization, it is the equivalent of stripping load‑bearing walls from a building to make the floor plan more open. Day by day, nothing seems to change. Then one day, something gives.

Empire at the Switches

If you wanted to design a world in which collapse could be triggered cheaply for political gain, you would start by concentrating essential flows and then arming a few actors with the tools to disrupt them. That is more or less the world we now inhabit.

Maritime chokepoints are guarded—or threatened—by navies. Financial rails are supervised by a few central banks and clearinghouses. Cloud centers sit comfortably within the jurisdictional reach of major powers. Undersea cables run through the exclusive economic zones of states that field submarines and listening posts. Fertilizer and grain flows answer to export controls and sanctions lists.

It is not hard to see how these structures get used. Sanctions on oil and gas become routine instruments of policy. Grain shipments are halted or “weaponized” in conflicts. Payment networks are turned off for entire countries. Cloud services are restricted or compelled into surveillance partnerships. Navies quietly signal which straits will be considered off‑limits in the event of war.

For the populations on the receiving end, none of this looks like an abstract “decoupling.” It looks like power flickering, fuel lines lengthening, prices spiking, shops emptying, and medical care degrading. It looks like the blackouts in Cuba today, played out at different scales and latitudes: an energy‑dependent modernity pushed over the edge by a deliberate tightening of the chokepoints it cannot live without.

The temptation in rich capitals is to assume that this weaponization will always run one way: from core to periphery, from empire to small states. The Iran war and Hormuz crisis are already a counterexample. So are Russia’s gas cut‑offs to Europe, Houthi attacks in the Red Sea, and the repeated cable cuts and port disruptions that follow every serious regional war. Peripheral actors can pull on the cables too. They may not own the cables, but they can still tangle and sever them.

After the Holocene

Civilization did not rise on a random roll of the geological dice. It was granted a long, improbable grace period: the Holocene, roughly twelve thousand years of unusually gentle, predictable climate in which temperatures, rainfall, and sea levels wobbled but did not lurch. For the first time in our species’ history, you could plant in the same valleys for generations, build canals that did not routinely dry up or wash away, store grain against next year instead of the next thousand surprises. Cities, empires, fossil‑fuel industry, global trade: all of it is scaffolding bolted onto that brief plateau of planetary calm.

What we call “modernity” is not just machines and markets. It is a particular style of risk‑taking that only makes sense when the background planet is quiet. You can afford to concentrate your power plants on low‑lying coasts, to run just‑in‑time grain shipments through a handful of straits, to route nearly all digital traffic through a few cable corridors and data centers, when the odds of simultaneous drought, flood, heat wave, and storm are vanishingly small. The Holocene’s gift was not abundance so much as reliability.

That gift is being withdrawn. We have already shoved the Earth system outside the bounds that defined the Holocene’s “safe operating space”: hotter atmosphere, wilder water cycles, acidifying oceans, unraveling ecosystems. The statistics are still catching up, but the lived pattern is clear enough: record heat on aging grids; once‑in‑a‑century floods arriving twice in a decade; failed harvests and displaced millions moving into cities whose own lifelines run through stressed rivers and contested straits. Under those conditions, the architecture we built for a calm planet does not merely strain. It turns predatory. Each extra degree, each lost forest, each collapsed fishery weighs hardest on the same narrow set of chokepoints you have been asked to trust with your electricity, your food, your savings, your medical care.

We are not just leaving the Holocene. We are entering an era in which the background climate and the foreground empire are aligned in one direction: towards more frequent, more geographically synchronized blows to the load‑bearing cables of our civilization. The old reassurance—that the planet itself would remain a neutral stage on which human politics played out—is gone. The stage is now an actor, and it is pulling on the same ropes.

Collapse, Reframed

When people talk about the “collapse of modern civilization,” they often mean an undifferentiated fall: climate tipping points, resource exhaustion, some generalized sense of “systems breaking down.” The reality now coming into view is more specific and more legible.

We do not need a simultaneous failure of everything, everywhere. We need a handful of critical nodes to fail in the wrong sequence. A major energy chokepoint like Hormuz. A cluster of refineries or LNG terminals pushed offline by a combination of storm surge and war. A year of overlapping harvest shocks plus export bans. A crippling outage or attack on a dominant cloud provider that also touches industrial control systems. A dollar‑funding squeeze that freezes trade finance for poorer importers just when they need food and fuel most.

Each of these is survivable in isolation, with enough time, luck, and political will. The danger is their convergence: war raising energy prices, climate extremes hitting crops, cyber incidents stressing grids and hospitals, financial panic accelerating capital flight and austerity. What looks like four different domains—energy, food, digital, money—turns out to be one system with shared chokepoints and feedback loops.

In that light, the Cuba blackout and the Iran war are not separate stories. They are early chapters in the same book: a civilization that has made itself faster, taller, and more impressive by resting more and more of its weight on fewer and fewer supports, in an era when those supports are increasingly contested.

The politics that follow from this are not reassuring. Elites with access to buffers—diesel generators, private security, second passports, diversified portfolios—will push risk down the chain. Populations at the periphery of empires, or at the literal low‑lying edges of continents, will be asked to absorb the rolling blackouts, food rationing, and water cuts. Middle classes will be told stories about necessary sacrifice and external enemies. Some will believe them. Others will not.

None of this is inevitable in a metaphysical sense. It is the sum of choices about how to organize infrastructure, who owns and governs it, what risks are tolerated for profit and power, and whose lives are deemed expendable when something has to give.

What my work is already documenting—Cuba in the dark, an oil empire gambling with Hormuz—is that those choices are made now, often in secret, and almost always in ways that increase concentration and fragility rather than reduce it. Seen together, these are not isolated crises but the wiring diagram of how a modern civilization fails.

If there is a useful reframe for people trying to think clearly about “collapse,” it might be this:

Stop picturing a slow, gradual fading of modern life. Start picturing a series of sharp blows to a few overloaded cables—and the cascading, uneven fall of everything hanging from them.

References

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Cuba’s Blackout Foreshadows a World Running Out of Oil

17 Tuesday Mar 2026

Posted by xraymike79 in Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Mental Health

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Climate And Conflict, Cuba Blackout, Cyber-Sabotage, Empire And Embargo, Energy Geopolitics, Energy Scarcity, Fossil Fuel Dependency, Global South Precarity, Grid Collapse, Humanitarian Crisis, Infrastructure Fragility, Just-In-Time Modernity, Late Industrial Society, Medical Infrastructure, Multi-System Collapse, Oil Blockade, Politics Of Scarcity, Sanctions As Warfare, Systems Failure Cascade, Technological Vulnerability

Cuba on Fumes

What does it look like when a modern society runs out of fuel?

Not in some Mad Max fantasy or distant climate model, but in a real country, with doctors still showing up to work, children still going to school when they can, and a bureaucracy still stamping papers in dim offices—until the generators die. For that, you don’t have to imagine much anymore. You can watch Cuba.

In early 2026, the island crossed a threshold. It did not just “tighten its belt” or endure yet another round of sanctions. It moved into a new phase where the fuel that makes a late‑industrial society possible is no longer reliably there. Tankers stopped arriving in any meaningful volume. Power plants coughed and failed. The grid, already limping, began to die in sections. Then, one March night, it simply went dark. Eleven million people slid into a nationwide blackout, not because of a hurricane or a single freak accident, but because the island had run out of margin.

Cuba has been a laboratory for empire for more than a century: plantation, colony, Mafia playground, revolutionary outpost, embargoed enemy, reform experiment. Now it is becoming an unintentional laboratory of something else: what happens when a present‑day, urban, technically competent society is forced to inhabit an energy regime that looks more like the coming century than the last one. If you want to know what “running out of oil” feels like from the inside, you could do worse than start in a Cuban hospital, waiting for the lights to come back on.

From Siege to Blackout

The story the United States tells about Cuba is simple. A failed socialist experiment mismanaged itself into ruin, and American sanctions are an unfortunate but justified response to dictatorship. In this version, blackouts and breadlines are morality plays, proof that history has rendered its verdict.

The reality, as usual, is messier and more damning. Cuba’s crisis is absolutely shaped by state mismanagement and sclerosis; it is also the direct product of a deliberate policy of energy strangulation by the hemisphere’s dominant power. It is not an accident that the island is running out of fuel. It is an objective.

For years, the embargo has been less a static wall than a living organism, mutating and tightening with each administration that needs an easy enemy. Under Trump, Cuba was re‑listed as a “state sponsor of terrorism,” tourism was choked off, remittances were constricted, and financial channels were mined. Venezuelan oil, once a lifeline, declined as Caracas sank into its own crisis. Tankers that did try to reach Cuban ports found themselves hounded by sanctions threats, insurance cancellations, and opaque “compliance” games played in distant banks—a de facto oil blockade enforced through the quiet terror of risk‑averse insurers and compliance departments in New York and London.

By late 2025 and early 2026, the cumulative effect of this pressure showed up in the only currency that ultimately matters for an energy‑poor island: barrels of oil and diesel. Cuba’s government could talk about reform, diversification, and efficiency all it liked. Without imported fuel, its options collapsed. The grid, a patchwork of aging thermoelectric plants, gas units, and small renewable projects, had already been running hot for years. Maintenance was deferred. Spare parts were scarce. Plants that should have burned cleaner fuel were instead forced to run on heavy, high‑sulfur crude that literally eats the turbines from the inside out. Diesel that should have gone to backup generators was being burned just to keep baseload plants running. When the flow of oil slowed to a trickle, the system ran out of workarounds.

Blackouts, once an occasional misery, became a daily fact of life. At first, power would vanish for a few hours, then return. Then the cuts stretched: eight hours, twelve, eighteen. Neighborhoods learned the rhythms of darkness. Elevators stalled. Refrigerators died. People cooked in rushes when the current came back, racing against the next outage. Finally, in mid‑March, the grid suffered what engineers politely call “complete disconnection.” In plainer language: Cuba’s electric system failed as a coherent whole. Officials traced the cascade to a failure at the Antonio Guiteras thermoelectric plant; when Guiteras tripped, protective systems did what they were designed to do—shed load, isolate faults—but there was so little spare capacity that the protection itself became the route to nationwide failure. For the first time in its revolutionary history, the entire island was without power, not after a hurricane, but after a long, grinding siege of its fuel supplies.

Systems Failing in Sequence

Electricity is never just electricity. It is the invisible scaffolding that holds up everything else. When it fails in a modern society, other systems do not simply “struggle.” They begin to fail in sequence.

Cuba’s hospitals were among the first critical nodes to feel the new reality. For decades, the island’s health system has been held up—rightly—as one of the revolution’s most impressive achievements: high vaccination rates, a dense network of clinics, a surplus of trained doctors deployed abroad as both solidarity and export. All of that depends on machines and logistics that assume energy and fuel.

Radiotherapy units for cancer patients draw enormous steady loads and cannot simply flicker on and off with the grid. Dialysis machines, ventilators, incubators, surgical suites, refrigeration for blood and vaccines—these are not decorative “modernizations.” They are the difference between life and death for tens of thousands of people at any given moment. When blackouts stretch past the capacity of hospital generators—and when diesel to feed those generators has to be rationed across an entire island—the health system stops being modern in any meaningful sense. Surgeries are postponed indefinitely. Intensive‑care units are redefined down to what can be done with minimal electricity. Doctors and nurses improvise heroically; the underlying trend is still decay. UN officials estimate that roughly 5 million Cubans with chronic illnesses now face disrupted medications or treatment because of blackouts and fuel shortages, with about 16,000 cancer patients needing radiotherapy and more than 12,000 on chemotherapy unable to get the care their machines and cold chains once made routine.

Water and sanitation are next. More than eighty percent of Cuba’s water pumping infrastructure depends on electric power. In the countryside, that means wells that no longer fill community tanks. In cities, it means apartment blocks whose taps go dry once storage tanks empty, and tanker trucks that may or may not have the diesel to deliver emergency supplies. Wastewater systems are no less dependent. When pumps fail, sewage backs up. When garbage trucks can’t fuel, trash piles up. The romance of “resilient communities” fades quickly when toilets stop flushing and the streets begin to smell. Nearly one million people—around a tenth of the island—now depend on drinking water delivered by tanker trucks that themselves struggle to find diesel, while more than 80 percent of Cuba’s water‑pumping infrastructure relies on electricity, producing “widespread and prolonged” service disruptions whenever the grid goes down.

Food follows. Agriculture, especially in a tropical island that has leaned heavily on imports, runs on a chain of energy‑intensive links. Diesel for tractors and harvesters. Fuel for trucks hauling produce to centralized markets. Electricity for refrigeration in warehouses, shops, and homes. When that chain frays, yields drop; what food does get harvested rots more quickly; imports become harder to move and store; diets simplify and shrink. Malnutrition rarely announces itself as a single famine event. It creeps in through smaller portions, fewer proteins, rising prices, and the quiet triage of households deciding who eats less. In Havana, families describe food bought with scarce remittances rotting again and again in dead refrigerators while elderly parents sit through twenty hours of heat in the dark.

Transport, education, policing, and administration all degrade alongside these primary systems. Buses run less often, then not at all; in the capital, public transport has simply vanished from some routes for days at a time because there is no diesel. Teachers cannot hold class in dark, sweltering rooms day after day. Police and emergency services prioritize only the most urgent calls because there is not enough fuel to respond to anything else. Bureaucracies that once generated paperwork begin to fall behind simply because computers and printers are dead more often than not. None of this looks like cinematic collapse. It looks like a million small failures, some reversible, some not, adding up to the feeling that the country is coming apart. This is what UN briefings mean when they say fuel shortages have “triggered a humanitarian crisis” and pushed Cuba’s health system “to the brink”: not an abstract warning, but tens of thousands of cancer patients losing treatment slots, millions with chronic disease cut off from regular care, and basic water and food systems slipping out of the category we call modern.

Cuba is experiencing this cascade now—not as a theoretical exercise, but as the daily texture of life.

Blame, Responsibility, and the Politics of Scarcity

At this point in the story, familiar scripts kick in. Cuba’s government blames the United States, the embargo, and “imperialist aggression” for the blackout. Washington and Miami hardliners point to corruption, incompetence, and the ossified one‑party state. Outside commentators pick their preferred villain, usually in line with whatever they thought about socialism or U.S. power beforehand.

There is no honest way through this that does not admit both sets of facts. Cuba’s ruling class has made catastrophic mistakes: half‑reforms that satisfied no one, a suffocating political culture, misallocation of scarce resources, and a chronic failure to build an energy system that could withstand foreseeable shocks. At the same time, it is simply true that the world’s largest economy has spent six decades designing and enforcing a web of laws, sanctions, and financial penalties explicitly meant to keep the island poor and vulnerable. When U.S. officials pressure third‑country shippers and insurers to avoid carrying oil to Cuba, and when those efforts succeed, the resulting fuel shortage is not an accidental side effect of “promoting democracy.” It is the intended lever.

This is where Cuba’s crisis stops being just a Cuban story and becomes a parable about the politics of energy scarcity in a world of tightening limits. Powerful states will not accept their own vulnerability gracefully. They will not one day wake up, read a climate report, and decide to share remaining fossil fuels fairly while they orchestrate a just transition. They will use access to energy as a weapon: cutting adversaries off, threatening allies, turning chokepoints into bargaining chips. They will also reach instinctively for scapegoats when the fallout hits their own populations: “corrupt elites in Havana,” “obstructionist environmentalists,” “greedy producers.”

On the receiving end, societies under energy siege will not necessarily disintegrate into democratic renewal. More often, they will polarize. Some people will demand accommodation with the hegemon at any price. Others will double down on nationalist or revolutionary identities. The state, fearing unrest, will ration and repress. The Cuban government’s reflex to blame everything on the embargo is both self‑serving and rooted in decades of real experience. The U.S. reflex to attribute every Cuban hardship solely to socialism is no less ideological.

In that sense, Cuba is giving us an advance screening of a more general trend. As the master resource of the industrial age becomes more constrained—by geology, geopolitics, or climate policy—the politics around it will harden. Every blackout, every fuel line, every failed harvest will become fodder for someone’s story about who deserves to live comfortably and who must tighten their belt or leave.

Catastrophic Loss, Modeled in Miniature

Long before Cuba’s grid began to collapse, researchers had tried to imagine what prolonged electricity loss and fuel disruption would do to complex societies. They did not frame their work as prophecy; they described structures.

Take one set of studies on catastrophic electricity loss. Instead of treating blackouts as momentary nuisances, they asked what would happen if power stayed off for weeks or months, across a large region. The results were monotonously consistent: IT systems, telecoms, and industrial control networks fail within hours; water and wastewater services break down as pumps lose power and backup systems run dry; within days, hospitals exhaust generator fuel and supplies and begin discharging patients; food supply chains falter as refrigeration and transport are interrupted; law enforcement and basic order erode as communications, fuel, and public trust are all strained. You only need to read the dispatches from Havana and the provinces to see this grim logic playing out in real time: reports of whole regions in the dark for twenty hours a day; surgeons postponing operations indefinitely; outpatient clinics closing early because they cannot guarantee safe conditions; parents queuing for water deliveries that may not arrive; farmers watching crops wilt in fields they cannot irrigate or harvest; journalists noting the smell of uncollected garbage in the streets.

What makes Cuba’s situation so revealing is its scale. Eleven million people is not a small village that can simply “go back” to pre‑electric life. It is a complex, literate, urbanized society that has built its health system, education, and agriculture around the assumption that energy will be available on demand at roughly industrial levels. When that assumption fails, you can watch the collapse of a modern society play out start to finish. The island is, ominously, the right size for a case study. In some respects there is no real analogue for what Cuba is undergoing now: an industrialized society pushed to the brink of grid failure and fuel exhaustion not by a single war or disaster, but by the slow squeeze of sanctions, mismanagement, and tightening global bottlenecks.

If you zoom out from the embargo and the revolution and just look at the pattern, you see the outline of something more universal: a modern grid pushed past its design limits by a combination of political choices and material scarcity, and the predictable cascading failures that follow.

Cuba’s blackout was triggered by fuel scarcity and an overstressed plant, not a line of malicious code. But we have already seen what deliberate sabotage of a modern grid looks like. In Ukraine, hackers linked to Russian intelligence twice broke into utilities’ control systems and remotely opened breakers across dozens of substations, cutting power to hundreds of thousands of people in minutes. Malware like Industroyer and Stuxnet has proven that a determined state actor can learn the language of industrial control systems and use it to blind operators, damage equipment, and bring down parts of a national grid without firing a shot. In a world of rising tensions, it is not hard to imagine Cuba‑style cascades triggered not only by lack of fuel or climate disruption, but by someone else’s decision to flip the wrong virtual switch.

The Future Arrives Unevenly

There is a fashionable way to talk about the end of the fossil‑fuel era in rich countries. It involves glossy renderings of wind farms, electric cars lined up in neat rows like iPhones, and smooth curves of “decarbonization” where oil, gas, and coal gradually shrink as renewables expand, all under reassuring phrases like “orderly transition” and “net zero 2050.” All this even though in the real world, fossil fuels still provide nearly four‑fifths of global energy and overall demand keeps creeping up. Cuba, like much of the global South, is living a different storyline. It is not transitioning away from fossil fuels because of some carefully designed, imaginary climate plan; it is being pushed off them by a combination of external coercion, internal failure, and global bottlenecks. The metaphor is not a pilot gliding a plane to a safe landing with less fuel. It is passengers discovering mid‑flight that the tank is emptier than advertised, the crew has been lying about the gauges, and the nearest runway is controlled by an enemy.

It is tempting to say that Cuba shows us what happens when a society “runs out of oil.” Strictly speaking, that is not quite true. There is still fuel on the island; tanks are not literally at zero; some generators still turn, some ambulances still drive. The blackout is intermittent, not absolute. The crisis is about not having enough energy to meet the expectations of a population that has been living at a certain level of modernity for generations—and this is precisely what “running out of oil” will mean for much of the world. Not a single, cinematic day when the last barrel is pumped and the lights go off forever, but a drawn‑out period where energy becomes unreliable, expensive, and weaponized; where blackouts go from rare to routine; where hospitals and water systems operate on the edge of failure; where getting to work, refrigerating food, and keeping medications viable become daily challenges rather than background facts; where states and empires use whatever leverage they have to secure their own flows at the expense of others.

Cuba sits at the intersection of these forces. Its energy scarcity is engineered by a hostile power; its infrastructure problems are homegrown; its population is caught between a government that cannot fix the problem and an empire that has no interest in seeing it solved on terms other than surrender. You could call this unique. You could also call it, uncomfortably, a preview of how many other places will experience the coming energy squeeze: not as a neutral “market correction,” but as a deeply political, deeply unequal process. The question is not whether the industrial world will eventually have to live with less cheap oil—physics, geology, and climate all say yes—but who will be forced into Cuba’s position first, how they will be treated when they get there, and what kind of politics will be built on top of that scarcity.

This does not mean the world is about to “become Cuba.” Large economies have deeper buffers, more diversified energy sources, and far more political and financial firepower. But the sequence of failure Cuba is exhibiting—the way electricity, fuel, water, food, and healthcare unravel when the energy floor drops—is not culturally specific; it is mechanical. You can see hints of it in Texas winter storms that push brittle grids over the edge, in European gas panics when Russia turns valves, in the cascading crises that follow every major hurricane or wildfire. We have seen miniatures of this sequence before—but Cuba is showing us what it looks like when the squeeze never really ends, when the more we build global systems around just‑in‑time logistics, electrified everything, and far‑flung supply chains, the more every kilowatt‑hour and barrel of diesel becomes a point of potential systemic failure. In that sense, the island is not an outlier so much as an early adopter of the future: a place where the energy assumptions of the twentieth century have already failed, and the twenty‑first has arrived without a plan.

Lessons from the Dark

There are two easy ways to misread Cuba’s blackout. One is to see it as evidence that socialism is inherently doomed to end in candles and queues. The other is to romanticize Cuban resilience as proof that human ingenuity can make do with almost any level of deprivation if the cause is just enough.

Both miss the point. Cuba’s plight says less about any one ideology than about the material reality of a world that has tied its basic needs to a fuel it cannot, in the long run, safely or fairly sustain. A different Cuban government might have managed the grid better, diversified earlier, bargained more skillfully, or surrendered more quickly. None of that would change the basic vulnerability of an island dependent on imported hydrocarbons in an era when powerful states increasingly treat energy access as a battlefield.

From the other side, Cuban doctors performing surgery by smartphone light are not proof that we can improvise our way through collapse. They are evidence that people will fight, creatively and stubbornly, to preserve what matters even after the systems around them have failed. That is admirable. It is also a warning. The more we rely on individual heroism and local coping, the more we normalize systemic cruelty as a background condition.

If there is a lesson for those of us watching from still‑lit cities, it is not that we should stockpile candles and canned food, though that may not be the worst idea. It is that we should stop treating energy and infrastructure as invisible scenery and start treating them as political choices. Who gets reliable power and who lives in rolling blackout. Who can afford fuel and who walks. Whose hospitals stay operating and whose go silent. These decisions are already being made in boardrooms and war rooms, by regulators, central bankers, and generals.

Cuba is not a distant curiosity. It is a mirror, angled just enough to show us how fragile our own arrangements are.

The Island and the World

It is possible that Cuba will muddle through this crisis. A tanker deal might slip past sanctions. A foreign ally might intervene. Domestic reforms might eke more efficiency out of the aging grid. The blackout might recede from headlines, replaced by the next disaster somewhere else.

Even if that happens, the episode will have done its work. It will have demonstrated, in an undeniably concrete way, that “humanitarian crisis” in the twenty‑first century is often just another name for energy scarcity multiplied by inequality. It will have shown that you do not need a world war or a total climate catastrophe to push a society to the edge. A sustained disruption of fuel and electricity is enough.

Climate change makes that kind of disruption more likely, not less. A third of global refining and a dense web of oil and gas terminals sit on low‑lying coasts, where rising seas and stronger storm surges can knock out production, storage, and ports in a single season—just as past Gulf Coast hurricanes briefly did on a smaller scale. At the same time, extreme heat and wildfires are pushing aging grids in rich countries toward their own rolling failures, forcing utilities to cut power pre‑emptively to avoid starting fires even as demand for air‑conditioning spikes. The result is a future where Cuba‑style energy cascades are not confined to sanctioned islands, but visit coastal empires and inland metropolises whenever physics and bad politics line up.

For those who still believe that the path away from fossil fuels will be smooth, managed from above by technocrats and CEOs, Cuba offers a different vision: messy, coercive, improvisational, and cruelly selective. Some places will be allowed to glide down the slope with subsidies, electrification, and investment. Others will be shoved.

The first island‑wide blackout in Cuban history is not the end of the story. It is a chapter heading. As wars over chokepoints like the Strait of Hormuz escalate, as climate shocks knock grids offline, as states experiment with sanctions as a daily instrument of policy, more societies will find themselves living on the edge of an energy cliff. Their experience will rhyme with Cuba’s, even if the local details differ.

Standing in the dark, waiting for the hum of the grid to return, people in Havana know something that many in richer capitals have not yet had to learn: modernity is not a fixed achievement. It is a temporary condition, rented from physics and politics, paid for in fuel. When the payments stop, the lights go out.

The rest of us would be wise to pay attention—not just to the morality tales we want to tell about Cuba, but to the material story the island is telling about all of us.

References

Aydoğan Ağlarcı, Merve Gül. “Cuba’s Strained Health System Approaching Critical Point, UN Warns Amid Fuel Crisis.” Anadolu Agency, March 9, 2026. https://www.aa.com.tr/en/americas/cubas-strained-health-system-approaching-critical-point-un-warns-amid-fuel-crisis/3858683.

Cancel, Daniel and Jim Wyss. “Cuba Suffers Nationwide Blackout as Fuel Supplies Dwindle.” Bloomberg, March 16, 2026. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-03-16/cuba-reports-total-nationwide-blackout-amid-us-fuel-crunch.

Frank, Marc. “Cuba Hunkers Down as a US Oil Blockade Brings a Humanitarian Crisis.” The Nation, February 16, 2026. https://www.thenation.com/article/world/cuba-oil-humanitarian-crisis/.

Greenberg, Andy. “‘Crash Override’: The Malware That Took Down a Power Grid.” Wired, June 12, 2017. https://www.wired.com/story/crash-override-malware/.

Rawnsley, Jessica. “Cuba: Millions Plunged into Darkness as Fuel Crisis Deepens.” BBC News, March 4, 2026. https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cx2ggpq1742o.

Rios, Annett and Alien Fernandez. “Cuba Hit by Widespread Power Blackout Amid US Oil Chokehold.” Reuters, March 4, 2026. https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/mass-blackout-cuts-power-across-most-cuba-amid-us-oil-chokehold-2026-03-04/.

United Nations. “Humanitarian Pressures Grow as Cuba Continues to Struggle With Fuel Shortages.” UN News, February 25, 2026. https://news.un.org/en/story/2026/02/1167046.

United Nations. “UN Says Fuel Shortages Push Cuba Into Humanitarian Crisis.” Xinhua, March 10–11, 2026. https://english.news.cn/20260311/f48c8b1bf66c4761b5d1c8635ce22dc4/c.html.

Vanlyssel, Jack. “Lessons from Stuxnet and the Ukraine Power Grid Attacks.” arXiv preprint, October 8, 2024. https://arxiv.org/pdf/2510.14185.pdf.

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The Knife at the Throat of the World

16 Monday Mar 2026

Posted by xraymike79 in Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Mental Health

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Air Defense Vulnerability, Climate And Conflict, Drone Warfare, Empire Decline, Energy Geopolitics, Financial Fragility, Food And Fertilizer Security, Fossil Fuel Dependence, Global Oil Shock, Gulf Monarchies, industrial civilization collapse, Iran War, Just In Time Economy, Limits To Growth, Middle East War, Oil Infrastructure, Petrodollar Order, Strait Of Hormuz, Strategic Chokepoints, Systemic Risk

Iran now holds something close to a knife at the throat of the world economy, and the war meant to humble it is instead exposing just how fragile that throat has become. The worst‑case scenario no longer looks like a lurid thought experiment; it looks like a short, brutal chain of decisions that planners can already see.

Terrain, Not Glory: The “300” Lesson in the Gulf

Think of the lesson popularized by the film 300: a small Spartan force using terrain to nullify a much larger invading army. In the Strait of Hormuz and around the Persian Gulf, Iran is the side that knows and holds the terrain.

Iran is a vast, mountainous country with deep interior basing, tunneled storage, and short distances from its coast to the key infrastructure of its rivals. The chokepoint that matters is not some abstract “sea lane,” but a narrow corridor between Iranian territory and Oman where almost all deep‑draft tankers must pass, and beyond that, a ring of oil export terminals and pipelines clustered on the Arab side of the Gulf. Even before this war, roughly 20 percent of the world’s oil flowed through this geography; now that flow is under active, demonstrated threat.

This is not a symmetrical contest of “our jets versus their jets.” It is a contest over who can most easily deny the other side’s economic oxygen using the geography in front of them. On that metric, Iran is fighting at home; the United States and its Gulf clients are fighting in an exposed cul‑de‑sac.

Blinding the Shield

The first move in that contest is not the glamorous destruction of aircraft carriers, but the quiet killing of eyes and ears.

Early Iranian salvos went after the big, billion‑dollar radar systems and communications hubs that anchor the U.S. missile‑defense and air‑defense architecture in the region. A U.S. AN/TPY‑2 radar in Jordan—the central sensor for a THAAD battery—has been reduced to a burned wreck, with similar long‑range radars and support facilities in places like Qatar and the UAE heavily damaged. Other strikes have hit SATCOM nodes and communications infrastructure that tie the whole picture together.

Washington insists the sky is not “blind.” In a narrow sense, that is true: there are still Aegis ships, AWACS aircraft, shorter‑range radars, and overlapping sensors. But what has been degraded is the ability to see far, to see high, and to stitch it all into a clean, six‑minute warning for defenders across the Gulf. The system was designed around the assumption that long‑range, high‑power radars like TPY‑2 and similar installations would give defenders a generous envelope to track, classify, and intercept incoming threats.

Once you start knocking those out, the character of the war changes. Warning times shrink from minutes to tens of seconds. Defenders are forced to rely more on local, shorter‑range sensors and point defenses. You no longer have a calm, top‑down picture and layered engagement; you have decentralized, last‑ditch reactions. In that sort of environment, cheap drones and short‑range missiles—especially when fired in swarms—become vastly harder and more expensive to stop.

A system built for six minutes of notice and layered interception starts to look much more like a 30‑second scramble between the first siren and impact.

One Day to Break the Terminals

With that shield degraded, the most dangerous next step comes into focus. It centers not on the Strait itself, but on the fixed infrastructure that makes Gulf oil exports possible at all.

The trigger is simple: the United States escalates from hitting Iranian forces and command nodes on Kharg Island to striking the island’s main oil export terminal and refinery. In Washington, this is framed as a way to “force” Iran to reopen Hormuz: if you keep the strait closed, we will destroy your capacity to use it when you finally yield.

In reality, markets are already treating Kharg Island as the fulcrum. U.S. Central Command’s March 13 strike deliberately hit air defenses, minelayers, and missile depots there while publicly signaling that oil infrastructure could be “next” if Iran keeps choking traffic. Investor letters now describe Kharg—which handles on the order of 90 percent of Iran’s crude exports via deep‑water VLCC berths, with a theoretical capacity of several million barrels a day—as “the single most consequential asset in global energy markets,” spared so far only because Washington wants to keep one lever in reserve.

The obvious question is what Iran does in response.

A rational Iranian response is not to try to match the U.S. ship for ship or plane for plane. It is to go after the oil terminals and loading facilities of its Gulf rivals: Iraq, Kuwait, Bahrain, the UAE, Oman, Saudi Arabia. In practice that means perhaps a dozen to fifteen large export complexes and a handful of key pipelines that route oil around Hormuz to the Red Sea or the Arabian Sea.

Against each of those targets, Iran can bring to bear the same mix of weapons it is already using: land‑based cruise missiles, ballistic missiles, and cheap Shahed‑type drones launched from concealed coastal and interior sites. The distances are short, the radars are degraded, and the defenses are saturated. If it takes a matter of minutes for Iran to hit targets in Israel, it takes on the order of seconds to reach many of these terminals.

The timescale for such a campaign is not months or weeks. Iran could, if it chose, plausibly disable most of these terminals in less than three days and quite possibly in a concentrated one‑day barrage. The aim would not be to lay waste to the entire Gulf, but to hit the loading arms, storage tanks, control rooms, and specialized equipment that make high‑volume exports possible. These are complex industrial systems. They do not spring back up like gas stations after a storm.

Rebuilding that capacity is a matter not of days but of calendar pages: at least six months of serious reconstruction, quite plausibly up to two years, before anything like pre‑war export levels resume. Under bombardment, with contractors wary and supply chains disrupted, the timeline stretches further. During that time, there is no “catching up” on lost shipments. The flows are gone.

A Paycheck‑to‑Paycheck Civilization

The power of this scenario comes into focus if you stop thinking about daily commodity charts and start thinking like a household living paycheck to paycheck.

Most Western households know the difference between a late paycheck and a lost job. Miss one month’s rent or mortgage and you don’t simply pay double the next month and carry on; you get evicted, your credit tanks, your life tips into a different trajectory. The loss is not linear; it’s a threshold.

The global economy is now in that position. After decades of just‑in‑time logistics, off‑shored production, and financialization, there is very little genuine slack left in the system. Firms, banks, and states exist in finely tuned chains of cash flow and confidence.

You don’t have to take this on faith. The “respectable” end of the commentariat is already inching toward the same cliff. Bank and energy‑sector notes now describe a prolonged Hormuz closure as the market’s worst‑case scenario, warning that even a partial, weeks‑long disruption could rival or exceed the oil shocks of the 1970s. Tanker operators talk openly of “no clear path to a pre‑war Hormuz” and calculate that, even with alternative pipelines fully used, perhaps half the normal Gulf flows simply cannot be rerouted. With tanker crossings reportedly down by something like 70 percent and more than a hundred vessels idling outside the strait, the world is already seeing what it means to treat a chokepoint as a weapon, not a corridor, in what the International Energy Agency now calls the largest oil‑supply disruption in history, with flows through Hormuz falling from roughly 20 million barrels a day to a trickle.

What these analysts mostly stop short of saying out loud is the next, obvious step: that if the war jumps from shipping lanes to export terminals, the world is no longer pricing a transient scare but a sustained amputation of the energy flows that keep industrial civilization running.

Two weeks with Hormuz effectively closed are already enough to show up as catastrophic first‑quarter revenues for key sectors. Take out a fifth of global oil exports for six months to two years, and you are not talking about a “temporary shock” that later gets amortized across a calm recovery. You are talking about waves of corporate collapses, sovereign defaults, food and fuel riots, and political crises that compound on themselves.

It is one thing for oil to spike to $100 and then drift back as traders calm down, even as the same traders now talk openly about $200 crude and a key Middle Eastern benchmark trades around $150. It is another for 20 percent of supply simply not to exist at any price for an extended period. The difference is the same as between a late paycheck and the loss of your job.
​
Monarchies on the Edge: Bahrain as Canary

Shift your gaze from infrastructure to regimes and the same pattern of no slack appears.

Every Gulf monarchy is essentially a small dynastic family sitting atop a heavily securitized state and a politically constrained, often unequal society. In Bahrain, a Sunni royal family rules a Shia‑majority population; in Saudi Arabia, a vast underclass and marginalized Shia minority sit under Al Saud; in the UAE, citizen‑minorities preside over vast migrant majorities. In each case, the bargain is clear: relative material comfort and subsidies in exchange for political quiet, backed by repression.

This war is eroding each pillar of that bargain at once. The flow of petrodollars is under threat; the sense of external security guaranteed by the U.S. is visibly fraying; and the spectacle of Iranian missiles and drones hitting nearby targets is emboldening opposition and frightening elites.

Bahrain is the most exposed. Even before this war, it was running chronic budget deficits, leaning on repeated Saudi‑backed bailouts to keep its finances and currency afloat; it has already taken direct fire in this war, entered the crisis with serious fiscal vulnerabilities, and is now being squeezed by both attacks and an energy shock. Risk analysts are warning that America’s war on Iran may bring Bahrain “to its knees,” and rare Shia‑led protests involving hundreds of people have re‑emerged across Manama and other towns, prompting a new round of arrests and crackdowns. Any fresh Gulf bailout, they note, is likely to be tied to harsher austerity, further eroding the social bargain the monarchy relies on. The kingdom has not fallen, but the edges of its stability are visibly fraying.

If this is what the most vulnerable monarchy looks like in the second or third week of war, it is not hard to extrapolate what six months of crippled exports, high prices, and visible U.S. impotence could do to the others. Regime change does not have to come via revolution; it can arrive through palace coups, forced power‑sharing, or a slow loss of control over peripheral provinces and security services.

From Tehran’s perspective, that is victory. The aim is not to plant the Iranian flag over Riyadh, but to ensure that every Sunni monarchy on the Gulf is so busy containing unrest and economic collapse at home that it cannot function as a reliable partner in any anti‑Iran coalition. A region of fractured petro‑states and inward‑facing royal families is a region in which Iran, battered but intact, is the last coherent state standing.

The Knife at the Throat

Put these pieces together and the “knife to the throat of the world” metaphor stops being hyperbole and becomes a plain description of leverage.

The blade is made of geography: Hormuz, and the short distances from Iran’s coast to its neighbors’ terminals. The handle is made of cheap drones, short‑range missiles, and hardened tunnels hiding launchers and boats. The hand holding it is the political leadership in Tehran, whatever exact faction wins the next internal struggle.

The throat is everything downstream of cheap Gulf energy: tanker routes, fertilizer plants, container shipping, food imports, interest‑rate policy, sovereign‑debt sustainability, the ambient political mood in dozens of countries that cannot feed or power themselves without steady, affordable hydrocarbons.

For decades, the American story about the Gulf has been that U.S. power held the knife—keeping sea lanes open, deterring attacks on infrastructure, underwriting monarchies, and stabilizing prices within tolerable bounds. The war with Iran is flipping that script. When Iran can blind marquee U.S. radars, saturate defenses, and credibly threaten to knock out a dozen terminals in a day, the question is no longer whether Washington can protect the world, but whether it can even protect the illusion that it is in control. Washington is now publicly begging allies to send warships to help reopen Hormuz—Trump warning “we will remember” who refuses—even as Germany and other European governments pointedly decline, insisting this is “not NATO’s conflict” and that “nobody wants to get involved” in direct Hormuz operations.

In that sense, the worst‑case scenario sketched here is not some wild new world. It is our existing world, seen without euphemism. A civilization that lives paycheck to paycheck, that has tied its food and finances to a handful of coastal bottlenecks, that has allowed its rulers to gamble on endless just‑in‑time growth, now finds that a single regional war can cut off its air.

You do not need mushroom clouds or a global draft to get something that feels like collapse. You just need a few days of well‑aimed missiles, a few months of missing shipments, a few years of political cowardice—and a knife that was always there, waiting to be noticed.

Civilization on a Master Resource

Beneath all the tactics and terminals is a simpler fact: modern industrial civilization rests on a single master resource. Oil is not just one commodity among many; it is the primary fuel and feedstock that makes the others usable at scale. It powers the machines that mine metals, build grids, move food, and fight wars. It underwrites the Haber‑Bosch plants that turn natural gas into nitrogen fertilizer, without which roughly half of the world’s current population could not be fed.

The Limits to Growth work and fifty years of energy‑systems analysis all converge on the same uncomfortable point: once you build a civilization around a master resource, you also build its failure modes around that resource. When cheap oil is abundant, everything looks solvable. When cheap oil becomes fragile or intermittently unavailable, the weaknesses you’ve been hiding with growth and credit show up all at once. Debt stops penciling out. Food becomes more expensive before it becomes scarce, then both. Politics hardens into open repression.

What the Iran war threatens is not “just” an oil price spike. It threatens a prolonged, deliberate constriction of the master resource that keeps the rest of the system from flying apart. You can improvise around a missing semiconductor plant or a blocked canal. You cannot improvise a substitute for 20 percent of the world’s oil and a large share of its nitrogen exports vanishing for a year or more. In that situation, collapse stops being an abstract curve on a system‑dynamics chart and starts being a daily experience: things you counted on simply not being there, at any price, for long enough that your society becomes something else.

That is why this worst‑case is not a side chapter in the story of modern industrial civilization. It is one of the main ways the story can end.
​

References

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Bahrain Mirror–Reuters. “Bahrain Bailout Tied to ‘General Assessment’ of Rebalancing, Not Reform.” Bahrain Mirror, 27 February 2019. https://bahrainmirror.com/en/news/52842.html

Bouissou, Julien. “Bombings in Iran raise fears of oil crisis.” Le Monde, 28 February 2026. https://www.lemonde.fr/en/economy/article/2026/03/01/bombings-in-iran-raise-fears-of-oil-crisis_6750979_19.html

Bousso, Ron. “Oil Markets’ Bet on a Brief Iran Shock Is About to Be Tested.” Reuters, 2 March 2026. https://www.reuters.com/markets/commodities/oil-markets-bet-brief-iran-shock-is-about-be-tested-2026-03-02/​

Capital Economics. “Saudi borrowing plan, Bahrain’s austerity steps, KSA opens up.” Middle East and North Africa Economics Weekly, 7 January 2026. https://www.capitaleconomics.com/publications/middle-east-north-africa-economics-weekly/saudi-borrowing-plan-bahrains-austerity

CBS News / 60 Minutes. “Cargo and tanker ship crews trapped, stranded by Strait of Hormuz crisis.” CBS News, 14 March 2026. https://www.cbsnews.com/video/strait-of-hormuz-choke-point-60-minutes-video-2026-03-15

Chin, Yongchang, Salma El Wardany, and Julian Lee. “Oil Market Chaos to Deepen as More Gulf Giants Cut Output.” Bloomberg, 8 March 2026. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-03-08/oil-market-chaos-set-to-deepen-as-more-gulf-giants-cut-output​

CNN Staff. “Live updates: Iran war news; Trump urges China, allies to help with Strait of Hormuz crisis.” CNN, 16 March 2026. https://www.cnn.com/world/live-news/iran-war-us-israel-trump-03-16-26

El‑Komy, Farah. “The Hormuz Inflection: Oil Markets After the Iran Strikes.” Habtoor Research, 7 March 2026. https://www.habtoorresearch.com/programmes/hormuz-oil-iran-strikes/​

Express Global Desk. “US-Israel-Iran War News Highlights: Trump threatens NATO over Strait of Hormuz blockade; ‘very bad future’ if allies don’t help.” The Indian Express, 16 March 2026. https://indianexpress.com/article/world/us-news/donald-trump-nato-warning-strait-of-hormuz-iran-war-oil-prices-10583960/

Farley, Clare, Minami Funakoshi, Pasit Kongkunakornkul, Kripa Jayaram, Sumanta Sen, and Simon Webb. “How the Strait of Hormuz closure affects global oil supply.” Reuters (graphics), 2026. https://www.reuters.com/graphics/IRAN-CRISIS/OIL-LNG/mopaokxlypa/

Fortune Staff. “Oil price went over $100 after U.S. admitted it cannot open the Strait of Hormuz.” Fortune, early March 2026. Underlying image: https://fortune.com/img-assets/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/GettyImages-2264289209.jpg

Fouda, Malek, and Aleksandar Brezar. “Iran’s New Ayatollah Vows to Keep Strait of Hormuz Blocked in Defiance of U.S. Threats.” Euronews, 11 March 2026. https://www.euronews.com/2026/03/12/brent-crude-spikes-back-over-100-as-iranian-strikes-target-commercial-ships-in-regional-wa​

Hafezi, Parisa, Alexander Cornwell, and Phil Stewart. “Heaviest Day of Strikes Yet on Iran Despite Market Bets That War Will Fade.” Reuters, 11 March 2026. https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/iran-says-oil-blockade-will-continue-until-attacks-end-trump-threatens-hit-2026-03-10​

Hempel, Parker, Ben Rezaei, Katherine Wells, Carolyn Moorman, and Annika Ganzeveld. “Iran Update, March 14, 2026.” Critical Threats Project, American Enterprise Institute, 14 March 2026. https://www.criticalthreats.org/analysis/iran-update-march-14-2026

Hidayat, Muflih. “Hormuz Crisis: No Clear Path to Pre‑War Energy Recovery.” Discovery Alert, 14 March 2026. https://discoveryalert.com.au/hormuz-recovery-scenarios-2026-supply-chain-infrastructure/​

Howard, Jacqueline, Fergus Gregg, and Maddie Nixon. “War in the Middle East live updates: European nations cold on Trump’s call to police Strait of Hormuz.” ABC News (Australia), 15 March 2026. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-03-16/live-updates-war-in-the-middle-east-iran-us-israel/106457864

“Iran Conflict Has Caused Large Asset Price Moves, Though Total Portfolio Impact Has Been Mild.” Verus Investments, 8 March 2026. https://www.verusinvestments.com/iran-conflict-has-caused-large-asset-price-moves-though-total-portfolio-impact-has-been-mild/​

Kaya, Hakan. “Risks to Oil from Iran: The Price of Uncertainty Flows Through Hormuz.” Neuberger Berman. https://www.nb.com/zh-tw/global/insights/article-risks-to-oil-from-iran-the-price-of-uncertainty-flows-through-hormuz​

JM Financial Services. “Strait of Hormuz Crisis: 20% Global Oil at Risk.” JM Financial Services, 1 March 2026. https://www.jmfinancialservices.in/blogs-and-articles/strait-of-hormuz-crisis-20percent-global-oil-at-risk

Kaya, Nuran Erkul. “Around 70% of global oil demand transported through strategic maritime chokepoints.” Anadolu Agency, 9 March 2026. https://www.aa.com.tr/en/economy/around-70-of-global-oil-demand-transported-through-strategic-maritime-chokepoints/3857495

Lee, Ying Shan. “Experts Weigh Potential Scenarios for Oil If Strait of Hormuz Closes.” CNBC, 1 March 2026. https://www.cnbc.com/2026/03/01/experts-weigh-potential-scenarios-for-oil-if-strait-of-hormuz-closes.html​

Lim, Hui Jie, and Holly Ellyatt. “‘We will remember’: Trump warns countries to help secure Strait of Hormuz as shipping stalls.” CNBC, 16 March 2026. https://www.cnbc.com/2026/03/16/trump-demands-allies-secure-strait-of-hormuz-oil-iran.html

Meredith, Sam. “Oil Prices: Why Traders Are Getting Nervous About Iran’s $200 Warning.” CNBC, 16 March 2026. https://www.cnbc.com/2026/03/16/oil-prices-iran-war-200-crude-strait-of-hormuz-supply-shock.html

Mueller, Henning, Tushar Bansal, Mark Clevenger, and John Corrigan. “Navigating the 2026 Energy Crisis: Beyond the Headlines.” Alvarez & Marsal, 9 March 2026. https://www.alvarezandmarsal.com/thought-leadership/navigating-the-2026-energy-crisis-beyond-the-headlines​

Nelson, Eshe. “Iran War Causing Largest Ever Oil Disruption, I.E.A. Says.” The New York Times, 12 March 2026. https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/12/world/middleeast/iran-war-oil-iea.html

Rikberg, Ragmar. “Oil Prices: What If Iran Manages To Keep The Strait Of Hormuz Closed For Longer.” Seeking Alpha, 10 March 2026. https://seekingalpha.com/article/4880635-oil-price-what-if-iran-manages-to-keep-the-strait-of-hormuz-closed-for-longer

Shamim, Sarah. “Strait of Hormuz: Which countries’s ships has Iran allowed safe passage to?” Al Jazeera, 16 March 2026. https://www.aljazeera.com/economy/2026/3/16/strait-of-hormuz-which-countriess-ships-has-iran-allowed-safe-passage-to

Shaw, David. “Iran Attacks Send Oil Back Above $100 as War Widens.” DW, 12 March 2026. https://www.dw.com/en/iran-attacks-send-oil-back-above-100-as-war-widens/video-76339303​

Shirbon, Estelle, Kylie MacLellan, Natasa Bansagi, and Zoe Law. “Iran war live: Dubai resumes flights after drone attack, Trump demands help to open Strait of Hormuz.” Reuters, 16 March 2026. https://www.reuters.com/world/iran-war-live-dubai-airport-drone-attack-trump-demands-help-open-strait-hormuz-2026-03-16

Stratfor / RANE Worldview. “Iran War Exposes Bahrain to Fiscal Risks, Sectarian Tensions.” Stratfor Worldview (RANE), 10 March 2026. https://worldview.stratfor.com/article/iran-war-exposes-bahrain-fiscal-risks-sectarian-tensions

The New York Times Staff. “Iran War Live Updates: Trump Pressures China and NATO Countries to Help Open Strait of Hormuz.” The New York Times, 16 March 2026. https://www.nytimes.com/live/2026/03/16/world/iran-war-trump-oil-lebanon

Williams, Rob. “U.S. Energy Secretary Says No Guarantees on Oil Prices with Strait of Hormuz Unsafe.” MarketWatch, 15 March 2026. https://seekingalpha.com/news/4564582-u-s-energy-secretary-says-no-guarantees-on-oil-prices-with-strait-of-hormuz-unsafe

Wiltermuth, Joy. “Individual Investors Are Chasing Oil’s Iran Conflict Surge, Institutions Are Thinking What Comes Next.” MarketWatch, 15 March 2026. https://www.marketwatch.com/story/individual-investors-are-chasing-oils-iran-conflict-surge-institutions-are-thinking-what-comes-next-1b3dda7b​

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The Pointless War That Breaks the World

15 Sunday Mar 2026

Posted by xraymike79 in Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Mental Health

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Airpower Illusion, Civilizational Breakdown Trajectory, Climate And Geopolitics, Degrowth By Disaster, Empire in Decline, Energy Chokepoint Warfare, Epstein Files Distraction, Escalation Trap, Fossil Capital Unwinding, Fossil Fueled Endgame, Global Supply Chain Fragility, Horizontal Escalation, Iran War Escalation, Limits To Growth, Militarized Distraction Politics, Petrochemical Agriculture Collapse, Terminal Fossil Capitalism, Zionist War Aims

Iran, Epstein, and the Fossil‑Fueled Endgame We Refuse to See

The U.S.–Israeli war on Iran is being sold as decisive: a necessary strike to end a threat, topple a regime, and keep nuclear weapons out of “the wrong hands.” In reality, it is something far darker and more banal, a strategically unwinnable war of choice that accelerates the breakdown of a brittle global order while serving the immediate political needs of a cornered president and the long‑standing ambitions of Israel’s ruling Zionist bloc.

To see this, you have to look at what the war can realistically achieve, what it conveniently distracts from, and what it is doing to the material systems, energy, food, and finance that keep billions of people alive.

The Airpower Illusion

Start with the core military claim: that precision airstrikes and “decapitation” can coerce Iran into capitulation or regime collapse. Across more than a century of modern warfare, this promise has never been kept. From Hamburg and Tokyo to Belgrade and Baghdad, cities have been burned and infrastructure shattered, yet not one functioning regime has fallen solely through bombardment.

Robert Pape, one of the leading scholars of airpower and coercion, has spent decades charting why. Bombs can destroy buildings and kill leaders, but regime collapse is a political event driven by elite fracture: insiders deciding the ruler cannot protect them, soldiers refusing to obey, the coercive core of the state coming apart. Under foreign air attack, that dynamic usually runs in reverse. External bombing fuses the fate of the regime with the fate of the nation. Elites who might privately resent the ruler now know that “switching sides” in the middle of a foreign assault means prison, exile, or a bullet from their own security services. Nationalism hardens, not softens, the regime’s grip.

Iran has spent forty years structuring its security apparatus around these lessons. Born in revolution and nearly destroyed in an eight‑year ground war with a U.S.‑backed Iraq, the Islamic Republic institutionalized a “mosaic defense”: dispersed command, redundant leadership nodes, decentralized missile and proxy capabilities meant to survive exactly the kind of precision bombing now underway. Kill one senior figure and another, often with even stronger ties to the security apparatus, steps in. Crater one bunker and authority reroutes. The system is built not for elegance, but for endurance.

That is why the opening U.S.–Israeli strikes, tactically impressive, with leadership compounds and missile sites obliterated, did not produce the advertised political effect. The Iranian state did not collapse. The government did not sue for peace. Instead, it absorbed the blow, reconstituted its chains of command, and escalated its own campaign.

The Escalation Trap

Pape calls the pattern we are now watching the “escalation trap,” and it has three stages.

Stage one is tactical success paired with strategic failure. Militaries hit almost everything on their target list. Air defenses are degraded, leadership decapitation appears to work, command hubs are reduced to ash. On paper, the opening salvo of the Iran war fits this description almost perfectly. Yet the political objective, regime change, denuclearization, or at least a docile Tehran, remains unmet. The regime holds. Its coercive organs remain intact. Its retaliatory capacity, though reduced, is far from eliminated.

Stage two is doubling down. Convinced they hold “escalation dominance,” the ability to climb the ladder faster and higher than their opponent, leaders respond to disappointment not by reconsidering their strategy, but by expanding it. More sorties, broader target sets, longer campaigns. If the first round weakened the enemy, surely the next round will break them. Precision bombing, in this logic, becomes a kind of narcotic. The images of successful strikes create an illusion of control that is untethered from political reality.

That is where the United States and Israel are now. Airstrikes are intensifying, hitting a greater number and range of targets, while the regime in Tehran remains in place and Iran’s nuclear materials are nowhere near “secured.” The gap between tactical success and strategic fantasy widens, not narrows.

Stage three is where the trap snaps shut: when expanded bombing still fails to deliver collapse, the menu of available options is dominated by catastrophes, ground troop deployments, seizures of territory, direct attacks on additional states, or covert operations so risky they amount to rolling the dice on wider regional war. By then, domestic political narratives are so invested in the war’s supposed necessity that backing down is framed as surrender. Leaders who launched the war under the illusion of control find themselves driven by its momentum.

This dynamic is not an accident or an aberration of the Iran case. It is a recurring pattern of the airpower age. Wars are begun with promises of quick victory and controlled escalation; they evolve into protracted quagmires precisely because bombing cannot achieve the political outcomes it is tasked with delivering.

Netanyahu’s Long War and Trump’s Short Fuse

If the war is structurally unwinnable on its own terms, why wage it at all?
In Israel, the answer runs through the ideological core of Netanyahu’s project. For years, he has framed Iran as an existential threat to the Zionist state and pressed for confrontational options, from sabotaging diplomacy to covert killings to overt strikes, aimed at breaking the Islamic Republic’s capacity to project power. Analysts tracing the prelude to this war describe months of coordination in which Israeli officials sought, and eventually obtained, a U.S. “green light” for a large‑scale attack on Iranian leadership and nuclear infrastructure. For Netanyahu and his allies, this is not a tragic mistake; it is the culmination of a long campaign.

In Washington, the logic is more squalid and more familiar. Donald Trump has been engulfed in a widening legal and political storm as the U.S. Justice Department releases millions of pages of Epstein‑related files, including allegations of sexual assault against him and details of his presence in Epstein’s orbit. The DOJ’s botched redactions, where supposed anonymizations could be reversed, and the sheer scale of the archive have fed a deep sense that something is rotten at the core of the American elite.

The timing is not subtle. Within days of some of the most explosive Epstein disclosures, the administration has shifted the media environment from sordid court documents to images of “decisive” presidential action: airstrikes, briefings at the Pentagon, flags behind the podium. Activist groups and watchdogs have been blunt about what they see: a president “illegally waging war” in part to distract from his own scandals and legal exposure, including those rooted in the Epstein files. Social media has filled with slogans about “bombs instead of accountability,” while, tellingly, pro‑Iran propaganda networks have eagerly amplified the “Epstein distraction” narrative to deepen U.S. domestic cynicism.

There is no smoking gun memo yet that reads “start war to bury Epstein.” What we do have is convergence. A president under unprecedented legal and reputational threat, faced with documents that expose his proximity to a notorious sex trafficker and contain serious allegations against him, suddenly stands at the center of a fast‑escalating war that his closest ally, Netanyahu, has long desired. The war does not erase the files, but it does what all wars do for embattled leaders: it invites the public to look up at the flag instead of down at the evidence.

In this sense, the war’s pointlessness at the strategic level is a feature, not a bug. A quick, neat victory would be one kind of story. A drawn‑out, amorphous confrontation in which “patriotism” can be endlessly invoked against critics is another. The longer the escalation trap holds, the more opportunities there are to tar opposition as unpatriotic, to classify information, to bury scandals under the noise of “national security.”

Horizontal Escalation and Global Fragility

While Washington and Jerusalem chase the mirage of coercive airpower, Tehran is pursuing a strategy that does not require battlefield victory at all. Iran’s answer to overwhelming conventional force is “horizontal escalation”: widening the conflict geographically and economically so that the costs are felt far beyond Iran’s borders.

That strategy is already visible. Iranian strikes and proxy attacks have hit commercial shipping in the Strait of Hormuz, as well as fuel storage and energy infrastructure in Gulf states from Bahrain to Saudi Arabia. Shipping companies are rerouting tankers or pausing voyages as insurers either withdraw coverage or demand prohibitive premiums. Roughly a fifth of the world’s oil typically moves through Hormuz; even partial disruption sends prices spiking, induces hoarding, and ripples through the entire global energy system.

The goal is not to defeat the U.S. or Israel militarily. It is to make the war so costly to everyone else, Gulf monarchies, Asian importers, European economies, that the political glue holding the anti‑Iran coalition together begins to dissolve. Horizontal escalation is a strategy of fracture: fracture the alliance, fracture domestic consent in partner states, fracture the illusion that this is a tidy, containable conflict.

This is also where the war stops being an “Iran issue” and becomes a planetary one. Modern civilization runs on tightly coupled systems. Fossil fuels feed not only cars and power plants but fertilizer factories, chemical plants, container ships, and cold chains—the refrigerated supply chains that keep food and medicine from spoiling. Nitrogen fertilizer is made from natural gas; pesticides and plastics are hydrocarbon derivatives; the armada that moves grain from “breadbaskets” to cities burns bunker fuel.

Choke off or severely destabilize the Gulf energy flow and you do more than raise gasoline prices in rich countries. You risk fertilizer shortages and price spikes that can reduce crop yields, especially in regions already on the edge. You drive up shipping and insurance costs in precisely the markets that move bulk food. You stress debt‑burdened states that import calories and fuel, pushing some toward default or social unrest.

In a just‑in‑time, financialized global food system, “a few breadbasket failures” plus supply chain disruptions can cascade quickly. Export bans, panic buying, and currency crises feed on each other. Hunger becomes political tinder. Migration surges. The kind of populist authoritarian leaders who thrive on fear, scapegoating, and emergency powers find fertile ground.

The Fossil Paradox: Degrowth by Disaster

Some climate advocates have noted, half ironically, that a prolonged crisis in Hormuz might force a reduction in fossil fuel consumption. If the war strangles the world economy, they suggest, it could end the hydrocarbon era faster than any climate summit.

There is a kernel of truth here. Scenario work on fossil fuel futures shows that unburnable reserves and “stranded assets” become more likely as demand flattens or falls under the combined pressure of climate policy, technology, and economic stagnation. Wars and recessions can accelerate this process by destroying demand, people and firms simply become too poor to buy as much fuel, and by making some high‑cost projects uneconomic.

But this is the nightmare version of transition. It is degrowth by disaster: an involuntary, chaotic contraction driven by war, instability, and policy failure rather than by planned exit and justice.

We have a living example. The Russian invasion of Ukraine triggered some increases in European investment in renewables and efficiency, but it also produced a scramble for liquefied natural gas, reopened coal plants, and huge fiscal subsidies to fossil producers in the name of “security.” The immediate effect was not a calm, orderly glide path away from hydrocarbons, but panic buying, windfall profits for oil and gas firms, and political backlash against energy prices.

A protracted Hormuz crisis would likely look similar, only bigger. Rich states would fight to secure supply through whatever means are available: new drilling, sweetheart deals with other petrostates, subsidized consumption at home. Poorer states would be left to absorb the price shocks: fuel shortages, food inflation, blackouts. Some fossil assets would indeed become stranded, but not primarily because we chose, wisely, to leave them in the ground. They would be stranded because the system that might have burned them collapsed first.

This is what makes the Iran war such a bleak emblem of our moment. On one side, it hastens the unraveling of a fossil‑fueled global order that is, per the best available modeling, already on track to hit hard biophysical and economic limits by around mid‑century. The original MIT Limits to Growth work and its subsequent updates show industrial output, food per capita, and other welfare indicators peaking and beginning to decline somewhere between 2040 and 2050 under business‑as‑usual assumptions. A recent data check by Gaya Herrington, then at KPMG, found that real‑world trends in resource use, pollution, and economic growth remain broadly consistent with those “collapse” pathways if we do not change course. In that sense, war‑driven economic strangulation simply delivers, in cruder form, the downturn those models anticipate.

On the other side, the way it does so, through bombing campaigns, sanctions, supply shocks, and opportunistic authoritarianism, maximizes suffering while minimizing agency. The people who will endure the worst effects of this chaotic contraction will have had the least say in starting it.

If this war helps end the fossil‑fuel age faster, it will be in the way a heart attack ends a smoker’s habit, not as a plan, but as collapse.

Pointlessness as a Message

By 2100, as one popular shorthand has it, “we are really f**ked.” A more publishable version, and the more uncomfortable truth if you read the curves and not just the headlines, is that the hinge is closer to 2050. That is within the expected lifetimes of most adults alive today, well within the working lives of anyone currently in their twenties or thirties. It is the horizon within which today’s wars, today’s fossil infrastructure decisions, today’s financial bets will harden into the constraints those people live inside.

Within that window, the Iran war stands out not because it is uniquely evil—recent wars in Iraq, Gaza, Yemen, and beyond have their own claims—but because it is so nakedly and structurally pointless. It cannot deliver the strategic transformations its architects promise. It can and will kill, maim, and immiserate huge numbers of people. It can and will rattle an already fragile global economy and energy system. It can and will be used to bury scandals, discipline populations, and concentrate power in the hands of men who should be on trial instead of in the Situation Room.

For the first time in modern history, the Strait of Hormuz is effectively closed to tanker traffic, stranding around a fifth of the world’s crude, products, and LNG in a single stroke. Iran’s new supreme leader has promised to keep it shut until the bombing stops, even as Trump boasts there is “practically nothing left to target,” a perfect image of a war that is running out of military moves while it continues to manufacture systemic risk.

That pointlessness is a kind of message from the system to itself. It says that we have reached a stage where the machinery of empire is no longer even pretending to secure a better future. It is simply trying to survive the news cycle and the next election, even at the cost of accelerating the collapse its own engineers have had clear evidence of on their desks for fifty years.

We do not get a say in whether this order ends. The physics and the math are not taking a vote. We are not going to finesse our way out of the structural unwinding of a fossil capitalist civilization; the system has been slamming into the walls described by the Limits to Growth model for fifty years. What we can still choose, in a shrinking window, is the manner of that crash: how much more of our shared future we feed into unwinnable wars, and whether the descent is left entirely to airstrikes and cover‑ups, or is at least partly disrupted by people who refuse to die as collateral in someone else’s escape from accountability.


References

Ahmed, Nafeez. “MIT Predicted in 1972 That Society Will Collapse This Century. New Research Shows We’re on Track.” Vice, July 14, 2021. https://www.vice.com/en/article/new-research-vindicates-1972-mit-prediction-that-society-will-collapse-soon/

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Azhari, Timour, and Marwa Rashad. “Iran War Threatens Prolonged Hit to Global Energy Markets.” Reuters, March 7, 2026. https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/iran-war-threatens-prolonged-hit-global-energy-markets-2026-03-07/

Beaumont, Peter. “The Escalation Trap: How the Iran War Could Become More Costly and Complex.” The Guardian, March 14, 2026. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/mar/14/how-iran-war-escalate-vietnam-trump-netanyahu-us-israel

Bennett, Geoff, and Courtney Norris. “Oil Expert Warns of ‘Nightmare Scenario’ Iran War Could Spark.” PBS NewsHour, March 9, 2026. https://www.pbs.org/newshour/show/oil-expert-warns-of-nightmare-scenario-iran-war-could-spark

Boncompagni, Tatiana. “U.S. Plan to Unblock Strait of Hormuz Collides With Realities of Global Insurance.” Wall Street Journal, March 11, 2026. https://www.wsj.com/finance/u-s-plan-to-unblock-strait-of-hormuz-collides-with-realities-of-global-insurance-feec54c6

Bove, Tristan. “Qatar’s Energy Minister Warns Iran War Could Bring Down Global Economies as LNG Exports Halt.” Fortune, March 5, 2026. https://fortune.com/2026/03/06/qatar-lng-halts-exports-iran-conflict-facility-shuttered/

Brookings Institution. “Why Are Fossil Fuels So Hard to Quit?” October 25, 2023. https://www.brookings.edu/articles/why-are-fossil-fuels-so-hard-to-quit/

Brooks, Daniel R., and Peter Watts. “The Collapse Is Coming. Will Humanity Adapt?” The MIT Press Reader, May 13, 2024. https://thereader.mitpress.mit.edu/the-collapse-is-coming-will-humanity-adapt/

Carroll, William K. “From Fossil Capitalism to Energy Democracy?” The Bullet, Socialist Project, March 3, 2020. https://socialistproject.ca/2020/03/from-fossil-capitalism-to-energy-democracy/

Chan, Alice. “Uncovering Supply-Chain Risks in the Iran War.” MSCI Research & Insights Blog, March 11, 2026. https://www.msci.com/research-and-insights/blog-post/uncovering-supply-chain-risks-in-the-iran-war

Döring, Thomas, and Birgit Aigner-Walder. “The Limits to Growth – 50 Years Ago and Today.” Intereconomics 57, no. 3 (2022): 187–191. https://www.econstor.eu/bitstream/10419/262955/1/s10272-022-1046-5.pdf

Gaya Herrington / Club of Rome. “Data Check on the World Model That Forecast Global Collapse.” Club of Rome, November 27, 2025. https://www.clubofrome.org/blog-post/herrington-world-model/

Gura, David. “Iran War Leads to Historic Closing of the Strait of Hormuz.” Morning Edition. NPR, March 11, 2026. https://www.npr.org/2026/03/11/nx-s1-5744857/iran-war-leads-to-historic-closing-of-the-strait-of-hormuz

Hayez, Léa, Fabrice Lécuyer, Mel George, Yiyi Ju, Meghal Arora, Miodrag Stevanović, Jacob Anz, Christoph Bertram, Jae Edmonds, Allen Fawcett, Jay Fuhrman, Gunnar Luderer, Franziska Piontek, Carl-Friedrich Schleussner, Bas van Ruijven, Anne Zimmer, and Elmar Kriegler. NGFS Climate Scenarios: Narratives and Key Findings – Net Zero 2050, Current Policies and Fragmented World. Network for Greening the Financial System (NGFS), 2025. https://pure.iiasa.ac.at/id/eprint/21047/1/NGFS%20scenarios%20narratives%20and%20key%20findings_0_pdf.pdf

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Norington, Elise. “Iran War Sees Oil Price Surge and Makes Interest Rate Hike Likely.” ABC News (Australia), March 16, 2026. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-03-16/iran-war-oil-price-interest-rate-inflation/106457068.

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Pape, Robert A. “The Air Power Illusion: Why Bombs Break Buildings, Not Regimes.” Escalation Trap (Substack), March 3, 2026. https://escalationtrap.substack.com/p/the-air-power-illusion

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Scribner, Herb. “4 Reasons Why the U.S. Attacked Iran with Israel.” Axios, February 28, 2026. https://www.axios.com/2026/02/28/iran-us-israel-strikes-operation-epic-fury

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Wilson, Lawrence Wollersheim. “Was the Club of Rome & MIT Study Right about Soon-Arriving Global Collapse?” Job One for Humanity, October 25, 2022. https://www.joboneforhumanity.org/what_is_the_the_club

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Actuarial World War: Iran, Oil, and the Cracking World Order

12 Thursday Mar 2026

Posted by xraymike79 in Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Mental Health

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Actuarial Warfare, China Iran Axis, Civilizational Collapse, Energy Geopolitics, Financial Chokepoints, Global Oil Shock, Global Supply Chains, Gulf Monarchies, Iran War, Late Imperial Crisis, Maritime Insurance, Multipolar Realignment, Petrodollar System, Russia Energy Strategy, Shadow Fleet, Stagflation Risk, Strait Of Hormuz, Strategic Petroleum Reserves, U.S. Empire, World Order

By the old metrics, the United States is winning its war with Iran. By the only metric that matters to the world economy, it has already lost.

The Americans have air superiority, three carrier groups in theater, and a tally of destroyed ships, depots, and radars that would have made a Cold War planner proud. They have decapitated Iran’s supreme leader, gutted much of its integrated air defenses, and claimed to have slashed missile launches from their opening‑day peak. By every traditional measure of military power, Washington is on top.​​

And yet the Strait of Hormuz—the narrow bottleneck through which roughly 20 million barrels of oil and a fifth of the world’s liquefied natural gas used to pass every day—remains commercially paralyzed. Not because a minefield was laid or a formal blockade declared. Not because the U.S. Navy cannot, in principle, escort tankers through the channel. But because, on a quiet March night in London, seven insurance letters went out, and a private actuarial cascade did what no fleet had ever quite dared to do: close the most critical energy chokepoint on Earth.

This is the kind of closure no cruise missile can reopen. It runs not on steel or explosives but on capital requirements, war‑risk premiums, and the risk tolerances of a few reinsurance desks governed by cautious rules about how much danger they are allowed to take on. Even if every IRGC missile battery were vaporized tomorrow, the Strait would not reopen tomorrow; not in commercial terms, not at scale.

In that sense, the Iran war has already slipped its old category. It isn’t just a regional conflict. It’s an actuarial world war and a stress test for an already‑failing civilization.​


How Seven Insurance Letters Really Closed the Strait

The story of the Strait’s closure didn’t start with a naval blockade. It started with paperwork.

Almost all big ships have to carry special “war‑risk” insurance to sail through dangerous areas. That insurance is arranged through a small club of companies in London that quietly sit behind about 90% of the world’s ocean‑going fleet. When they say “you’re covered,” ships move. When they say “you’re on your own,” ships stop.​

When the Iran war began and missiles started flying around the Gulf, those London firms ran the numbers and decided the risk was simply too big. One fully loaded supertanker could mean hundreds of millions of dollars in damage and pollution claims. The global pot of money set aside for this kind of war coverage is only on the order of a billion dollars a year. One or two bad hits could wipe it out.

So, over a couple of days, seven of the main insurance clubs sent out cancellation letters to shipowners saying, in effect: “After this date, your war cover in and around the Strait of Hormuz is canceled.” Their own backers—the big wholesale insurers who sit behind them and help carry catastrophic losses—had already warned that they would no longer stand behind Gulf war policies. Once that backing disappeared, the frontline insurers had no choice but to pull out too.​

The effect was immediate and brutal. Tanker traffic through Hormuz collapsed from a steady flow of ships to just a handful a day; on some days, crude tanker transits fell into the single digits, compared with an average of roughly two dozen before the war. Hundreds of vessels ended up parked at anchor—full of oil but going nowhere. Rates for any ship still willing to try the Strait exploded. In peacetime, insuring a big tanker for a trip through the Gulf might cost around a few tens of thousands of dollars. Within days, it cost on the order of one to three million dollars extra for a single voyage, with some supertanker day‑rates briefly approaching $800,000 and war‑risk premiums jumping roughly four‑ to twelve‑fold.

Technically, some insurance was still “available” if you were willing to pay those sky‑high prices. But in practice, most shipowners looked at the cost, looked at the missiles on TV, and said: we’re not doing this. Captains didn’t want to sail their crews into a live war zone just because some government somewhere promised to help if things went wrong.​

This is the key point: the Strait wasn’t mainly closed by mines or by the Iranian navy. It was closed by the people who insure ships deciding that the journey was no longer worth the risk. The world’s most important oil route was shut down not by an admiral, but by actuaries and risk managers behind desks in London.​

That is why it cannot be reopened overnight, even if the shooting stops. To really “reopen” Hormuz, those same firms would have to see months of calm, rebuild their risk models, convince their own backers to put fresh money at risk, and then slowly start offering affordable policies again. That is a long, cautious process. No amount of presidential speeches or aircraft carriers can force it to move faster.

Global seaborne trade, it turns out, does not run on naval protection. It runs on a layered stack of private promises. When the top layer of that stack says “no more,” the tankers stop just as surely as if someone had sunk a ship in the channel.​


Trump’s Insurance Fix Meets the Real World

Washington tried to improvise a fix. It ran straight into the limits of its own power.

President Trump unveiled a $20 billion federal scheme to “ensure the free flow of energy to the world,” promising that the U.S. would provide political‑risk cover for “all shipping” in the Gulf, backed if necessary by Navy escorts. The U.S. Development Finance Corporation was tasked with turning that bravado into actual contracts: an “America First” war‑risk program led by U.S. insurers.​

There was a basic problem. The war‑risk ecosystem is not American. It is planetary, and it is centered, structurally and culturally, in London.

War‑risk policies are sold mostly through Lloyd’s and other London‑based syndicates, with foreign insurers covering foreign ships and cargo. As one broker dryly put it, there is “a whole ecosystem around war risks,” and “it’s very rare that U.S. insurers position themselves anywhere near that ecosystem.” When U.S. officials began calling London insurers and brokers asking how the market actually worked—and, reportedly, asking for sensitive data—participants balked.

The plan was quietly rewritten. Instead of directly insuring ships, the $20 billion would be used as backup insurance—coverage that existing carriers could buy to protect themselves if something went catastrophically wrong. Even then, Trump’s sweeping pledge to cover “all” Gulf maritime trade was walked back. The federal backstop would be limited to ships meeting still‑unspecified criteria, on still‑unspecified terms, with no clear timeline.​

In the meantime, something else became clear. The main reason ships weren’t sailing was not a scarcity of paper cover. It was the risk to crews. “Insurance for ships in the region is readily available,” one senior broker said. “Lloyd’s is open for business.” But crews and owners were “too wary to risk the passage,” as one LNG carrier CEO put it, citing safety rather than the nuances of government reinsurance.​

In other words, Washington could not simply will the Strait open again with a checkbook and a carrier group. It had discovered, in real time, that the operating system of its empire—those invisible layers of private contracts and overseas regulations—was not under its sovereign control.


Iran’s Shadow Fleet Advantage

If you are looking for a clear winner in this catastrophe, you do not find it in Washington or Riyadh. You find it in Tehran—and in Beijing’s ledger.​

As Gulf Arab exporters from Saudi Arabia to Iraq cut output and scramble to reroute via long, expensive pipelines, Iran is exporting more oil through Hormuz than it did before the war began. In the first days after the conflict started, tankers loaded an average of about 2.1 million barrels per day of Iranian crude, slightly higher than February’s 2 million.​​

The reason is painted right on the hulls and whispered over the radio.

Most of the ships still daring the Strait now belong to the “shadow fleet”: older, sometimes decrepit tankers, often owned by opaque shells in Dubai or India, flying fake or permissive flags, and already under U.S. sanctions for helping Iran or Russia move oil. They load at Iranian terminals like Kharg Island and steam for Chinese ports, sometimes visible on tracking systems, sometimes running dark.​

“Almost all ships crossing the Strait are linked to Iran or China,” a maritime‑security executive told reporters. “We are advising all shippers not to cross.”​

These vessels do not pretend to be neutral. They perform loyalty. “We are a Chinese ship. We are coming through; we are friendly,” one small Chinese tanker repeatedly broadcast in English to the IRGC navy over short‑wave radio as it approached the narrows, on channels heard by other ships and by journalists. In effect, China is announcing: we are not your enemy, we are your indispensable customer.​

Iran has threatened to attack any ship trying to cross since the U.S.‑Israeli bombardment began, and it has already hit some gray‑fleet tankers to prove the point. But its declared strategy is clear: let its own and China’s barrels flow while scaring off everyone else.​

The result is perverse but logical. Iran, under aerial assault, is still exporting and earning hard currency. China, already reliant on Iran for a sizable share of its oil imports, is paying a risk premium but enjoying discounted barrels while its chief competitor, the U.S., scrambles with allies to contain the price shock. Russia—struggling with sanctions and infrastructure sabotage—suddenly finds its crude a relatively safer “swing barrel” alternative in Asia and Europe, and presses ahead with new pipelines to hard‑wire energy ties with China.​

The chokepoint is “closed” in precisely the way that hurts Washington and its Gulf allies most. The empire’s friends are stranded; its adversaries move onward.​​


Bypasses, Yanbu, and the Limits of Workarounds

None of this means producers are simply giving up. Saudi Arabia, in particular, is throwing everything it has at the problem of escaping Hormuz.

Riyadh is rushing crude into its East–West pipeline from Abqaiq to Yanbu on the Red Sea and has pushed flows toward the line’s 7‑million‑barrel‑per‑day nameplate capacity, though analysts note that roughly 2 million bpd of that serves domestic refineries, leaving perhaps 4.5–5 million bpd available for export. In parallel, Saudi’s national shipper Bahri has been snapping up “every spare tanker” it can find to build an armada at Yanbu: at least two dozen VLCCs and other tankers are steaming in from as far as Singapore, many chartered at record rates of around $450,000 per day, far above any pre‑war benchmark.​

Together with the UAE’s Habshan–Fujairah pipeline, which can carry roughly 1.5–1.8 million bpd to the Gulf of Oman, these routes give the core monarchies a significant bypass. But even in an optimistic reading, regional pipelines and Red Sea workarounds might move 7–8 million barrels per day without Hormuz—still far short of the roughly 20 million barrels that normally pass through the Strait. Iraq, Kuwait, Bahrain, and Qatar, whose exports are still overwhelmingly trapped behind Hormuz, have nothing comparable.

The Yanbu flotilla is thus a vivid illustration of both ingenuity and constraint. It shows how desperate even a giant like Saudi Arabia is to avoid being strangled by Hormuz, and how few states have the geography, capital, and infrastructure to attempt such a workaround. It also underlines this core point: bypasses are real, but they are narrow emergency valves, not replacements for the firehose.​


Flow, Duration, and the World Economy

Most commentary on the Iran conflict still treats it as an “oil shock.” That phrase is too small. What we are watching is an attack on the circulatory system of industrial civilization. Iran’s own commanders now say openly that they are prepared for a long war that would “destroy the world economy,” framing continued pressure on Hormuz as a deliberate strategy rather than a temporary side effect. Analysts estimate that Iran’s closure of Hormuz and follow‑on attacks have stranded around a fifth of global oil supply that normally relies on the Strait, with many millions of barrels per day offline in immediate flows and more production forced to shut in as storage fills. This is, by volume, what the International Energy Agency now calls “the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market,” greater than the Arab embargo or the Gulf War.

Pipelines across Saudi Arabia and the UAE, even pushed hard, can bypass only a fraction of this—on the order of 7–8 million bpd at best when regional infrastructure and domestic needs are fully accounted for. The rest, easily in the mid‑teens of millions of barrels every single day, has nowhere to go.​

Over six months, that implies on the order of one and a half to nearly two billion barrels that never reach refineries, trucks, or ships; over nine months, well over two billion. Strategic reserves can meet a slice of the gap for a while. The IEA is already coordinating what it calls the largest emergency stock draw in history—some 300–400 million barrels—but even its own officials frame this as a bridge, not a substitute for an open Strait. They cannot sustain a huge daily deficit for a year without emptying the world’s emergency tanks.

Markets have already sampled the price impact. In the early days of the war, crude vaulted near or above $100, briefly spiking toward $120, before presidential jawboning about a “very soon” end and hopes of a diplomatic off‑ramp helped drag prices back under $80—for now. Analysts at major houses warn that if the semi‑closure and associated attacks on infrastructure last months rather than weeks, triple‑digit oil becomes the floor, not the ceiling.​

The macro mechanics are brutal. Every sustained ten‑dollar increase in oil tends to add around a tenth or two‑tenths of a percentage point to global inflation; prolonged prices in the $100–150 range, especially with gas and LNG also tight, can add nearly a full point. Central banks already wounded by the last inflation cycle face a choice between hiking rates into energy‑driven price spikes—risking deep recession—or letting inflation run hotter, eroding currencies, and importing cost‑of‑living crises. In fragile states, higher fuel and fertilizer prices translate within weeks into food shortages and unrest. Agricultural analysts are already warning that fertilizer markets are jolting, with knock‑on effects for future harvests and global grain prices.

By one month, the pain shows up as volatility and headlines. By three, it shows up as bankruptcies in aviation, shipping, and heavy industry. By six to nine, it appears as synchronized downturn: stagflation in rich countries, debt and currency crises in poorer ones, and political systems everywhere pressed to choose who eats the loss.

That is why even cautious institutions—IMF staffers, energy economists, central‑bank watchers—now talk about this war as a “profound shock” for the global economy, one that risks scarring growth for years if the Strait is not normalized.


How Long Can Iran Keep Hormuz Shut?

There is no honest way to put a clean percentage on how long Iran can keep Hormuz commercially crippled. But at this point a months‑long, partial closure—one that strands large volumes and keeps insurance and freight costs punitive—looks less like a tail risk than the base case. Iran does not need a perfect blockade; it only has to sustain a steady drumbeat of drone and missile harassment and credible threats at a level that keeps most mainstream tanker owners, crews, and underwriters unwilling to treat the Strait as “safe enough,” and its current arsenal and backing suggest it can do that for some time.

On the other side, the United States and its allies almost certainly have the raw naval power to prevent a neat, formally declared closure over the very long run. What they have not yet found is a way to make commercial operators accept the residual risk of sailing through an actuarial kill zone. A brief disruption is now almost off the table; a multi‑month semi‑closure with rolling attacks and insurance shocks is the live scenario; a years‑long near‑total shutdown still remains unlikely, not because Washington can magically “win” the Strait, but because at some point the combined pressure of China, Russia, Europe, and the Global South to normalize flows would become existential for Tehran itself.


Realignment: America’s Suez Moment

But while the immediate story is barrels and basis points, the deeper story is realignment. The Hormuz war is functioning as a 21st‑century Suez moment.

In 1956, Britain and France discovered in Egypt that they could no longer wage war without American financial and diplomatic cover. In 2026, the United States and Israel are discovering that they cannot bend the Middle East to their will without shredding the economic fabric on which their own legitimacy depends—and that they do not fully control that fabric anymore.

In strategic terms, Iran has been playing chess—investing for years in missiles, drones, and a shadow fleet, deepening ties with China and Russia, and now using the actuarial closure of Hormuz to turn each new “victory” for Washington into another wound to the system that sustains it—while the U.S. and Israel still act as if the game is checkers.

Across the world, states are drawing conclusions. In the Gulf, allies quietly ask what U.S. “security guarantees” mean if three carrier groups and a $20 billion insurance scheme cannot keep their tankers safe or their economies out of harm’s way. In Beijing, policy planners see that America’s regime‑change project in Tehran is faltering, but that their own over‑concentration on Gulf energy is now a glaring vulnerability; they turn with renewed urgency to Russian pipelines, Central Asian routes, and domestic energy security. In Moscow, the Kremlin sees opportunity: Russia as swing supplier and “indispensable arbiter,” its oil and gas suddenly recast as necessary balancers rather than pariah commodities, with even Washington quietly easing some constraints to keep markets from breaking. Across the Global South, from Delhi to Brasília to Johannesburg, elites watch the “rules‑based order” generate mass death in Gaza and now a global energy shock, and they hedge: more deals with China, more flirtation with BRICS, more skepticism toward Washington’s lectures.​​

For one analyst, Hormuz is “America’s Suez moment in the Persian Gulf”: a crisis that exposes diminished capacity and accelerates a drift toward a messier, more contested, multipolar order in which the U.S. is a large player, but no longer the metropole.​

This is not a clean handoff to some benevolent alternative. It is a reconfiguration into blocs and shadow systems: an American‑led camp trying to weaponize access to formal energy markets and shipping insurance; a China‑Russia‑Iran axis improvising gray routes, long land pipelines, and shadow fleets to keep their hydrocarbons moving; and a loose, anxious periphery of import‑dependent states trying not to drown in the crossfire.

The Iran war is not creating this pattern from scratch. It is forcing it into the open.


Fast Shock, Slow Collapse

The narrower policy debate still asks: will this be a short, sharp shock or a drawn‑out crisis? The more honest question is: how does this shock plug into a civilization that was already cracking?​

Long before the first bomb fell on Tehran, the industrial order lived on borrowed time. Its core assumptions—that energy would be cheap and available, that climate would be stable enough to grow food, that debt could grow faster than the real economy forever—were already eroding. The Iran war did not invent those contradictions. It revealed them.

At one level, Hormuz is a classic “fast collapse” mechanism. Remove a fifth of world oil from safe circulation, and complex systems stumble. Just‑in‑time supply chains freeze without diesel. Fertilizer prices spike, setting up future food shocks. Airline routes and tourism evaporate, crushing peripheral economies. Bonds tied to assumptions about low inflation and steady growth suddenly look mispriced.​

At another level, the crisis speeds up “slow collapse” processes already underway. Energy transition plans built on natural gas as a “bridge fuel” look fragile when LNG itself becomes a weaponized scarcity. Attempts to “reshore” or “friend‑shore” supply chains bump up against physical limits: you can’t near‑shore oil, and you can’t electrify container shipping overnight. Trust in institutions—central banks, alliances, international law—erodes a little further each time they fail to contain the fallout.

Civilizations fall when their elites can no longer manage the feedback loops between ecology, economy, and legitimacy. In that sense, the actuarial closure of Hormuz is less a discrete “event” than a diagnostic. It shows us how little slack remains in the energy system, how financial plumbing now governs physical survival, and how quickly “somebody else’s war” becomes your electricity bill, your grocery store, your mortgage.​

Iran’s leadership has said, in various ways, that it will fight on until U.S. forces are driven from the region. With Russia and China providing, at minimum, diplomatic and economic backing, it has less incentive than ever to capitulate. The United States, locked into its own narratives of credibility and deterrence, has boxed itself into a conflict it cannot easily end without admitting limits.

In that sense, the world is not just drifting toward a new order. It is stumbling through the late stages of an old one whose operating assumptions—cheap fossil energy, imperial policing of chokepoints, smooth global trade—no longer hold.​


World War III Without the Name

The phrase “World War III” conjures trenches and mushroom clouds. On that imagery, this crisis will never qualify. But strip away nostalgia, and the functional criteria are straightforward.

Multiple great powers are entangled, directly or through vital interests. The conflict threatens the basic functioning of the global economic system. Societies far from the battlefield are forced into large‑scale, involuntary sacrifice.

By those measures, a long Iran war that keeps Hormuz semi‑closed, shreds energy markets, realigns alliances, and pushes dozens of states toward debt or hunger is a world war in everything but the formal declaration.

It is a war in which seven insurance letters have more power than three carrier groups; in which the most important “front” may be a risk spreadsheet in London or a Politburo meeting in Beijing; in which the decisive casualty could be not a city but a story—the story that one country, at the center, can guarantee order.​

Call it something else if you like. In the balance sheets, the shipping lanes, and the lives of people who will never see the Strait of Hormuz, it already feels like a world war.


References

AG Bull. “Fertilizer & Commodity Markets Jolt as Iran War Scrambles Supply.” AG Bull, March 9, 2026. https://www.agbull.com/fertilizer-end-in-sight/.​

Atlantic Council. “Experts React: How the World Is Responding to the US‑Israeli War with Iran.” Atlantic Council, March 3, 2026. https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/dispatches/experts-react-how-the-world-is-responding-to-the-us-israeli-war-with-iran/.​

Bloomberg. “Saudis Snap Up Every Spare Tanker They Can for Hormuz Bypass.” Bloomberg, March 12, 2026. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-03-12/saudi-oil-tanker-giant-snaps-up-ships-for-hormuz-workaround.​

Columbia University Center on Global Energy Policy. “How the Iran Conflict Is Reshaping Russia and China’s Energy Security.” Columbia SIPA, March 9, 2026. https://www.energypolicy.columbia.edu/how-the-iran-conflict-is-reshaping-russia-and-chinas-energy-security/.​

Countercurrents. “From Tehran to the World: What an Iran War Reveals About Global Fragility.” Countercurrents, March 10, 2026. https://countercurrents.org/2026/03/from-tehran-to-the-world-what-an-iran-war-reveals-about-global-fragility/.​

Eaglesham, Jean, and Costas Paris. “U.S. Plan to Unblock Strait of Hormuz Collides With Realities of Global Insurance.” Wall Street Journal, March 11, 2026. https://www.wsj.com/finance/u-s-plan-to-unblock-strait-of-hormuz-collides-with-realities-of-global-insurance-feec54c6.​

Energy Intelligence. “Aramco Ramps Up Hormuz Bypass Flows.” Energy Intelligence, March 9, 2026. https://www.energyintel.com/0000019c-d826-d613-a5be-fb6f29340000.​

Euronews. “Iran War Shocks Continue to Ripple Through the Global Economy.” Euronews, March 9, 2026. https://www.euronews.com/business/2026/03/10/iran-war-shocks-continue-to-ripple-through-the-global-economy.​

Fast Company. “IEA Plans Largest Oil Reserves Release in History.” Fast Company, March 11, 2026. https://www.fastcompany.com/91507417/iran-us-oil-europe-reserve-release.​

Fortune. “Top Economist Says Iran War Could Trigger an Economic ‘Butterfly Effect’.” Fortune, March 10, 2026. https://fortune.com/2026/03/11/oil-inflation-butterfly-effect-kpmg-trump/.​

IEA / EIA. “Amid Regional Conflict, the Strait of Hormuz Remains Critical Oil Chokepoint.” U.S. Energy Information Administration, March 9, 2026. https://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.php?id=65504.​

Investing.com. “Crude Oil: Record Reserves Release Eyed, But Will It Stabilize Prices?” March 11, 2026. https://www.investing.com/analysis/crude-oil-record-oil-reserves-release-eyed-but-will-it-stabilize-prices-200676456.

Le Monde / AFP. “Iran Says It’s Ready for a Long War That Would ‘Destroy’ Global Economy.” Le Monde, March 11, 2026. https://www.lemonde.fr/en/middle-east-crisis/article/2026/03/11/iran-says-its-ready-for-a-long-war-that-would-destroy-global-economy_6751340_368.html.

Morningstar / Dow Jones. “Saudi Arabia Pushes East–West Pipeline Toward Capacity Amid Hormuz Disruption.” March 10, 2026. https://www.morningstar.com/news/dow-jones/202603104313/saudi-arabia-pushes-east-west-pipeline-toward-capacity-amid-hormuz-disruption.

National Interest. “How the Iran War Will Undermine US Competition with China.” The National Interest, March 5, 2026. https://nationalinterest.org/feature/how-the-iran-war-will-undermine-us-competition-with-china.

New Dawn Nigeria. “From Assassination to Regional War: How Iran Crisis Could Reshape Global Order.” New Dawn, March 10, 2026. https://www.newdawnngr.com/2026/03/10/from-assassination-to-regional-war-how-iran-crisis-could-reshape-global-order/.​

New York Times. “Global Economy Is Facing the Prospect of Another Profound Shock.” New York Times, March 3, 2026. https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/03/business/us-iran-israel-economic-fallout.html.

Nitishastra (Substack). “The Hormuz Crisis: America’s Suez Moment in the Persian Gulf.” March 9, 2026. https://nitishastra.substack.com/p/the-hormuz-crisis-americas-suez-moment.​

NPR. “IEA Members to Tap into Oil Reserves.” NPR, March 11, 2026. https://www.npr.org/2026/03/11/nx-s1-5743816/iran-war-oil-reserves-iea.​

Perera, Shanaka Anslem. “Actuarial Warfare: How Seven Insurance Letters Closed the World’s Most Critical Chokepoint and Why Markets Are Mispricing Duration by 300%.” Substack, March 9, 2026. https://shanakaanslemperera.substack.com/p/actuarial-warfare-how-seven-insurance.​

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The Hill. “IEA to Release 400M Barrels to Offset Oil Shortage over US–Iran Conflict.” The Hill, March 11, 2026. https://thehill.com/policy/energy-environment/5778639-iea-oil-strategic-reserves-iran-war-strait-of-hormuz/.​

The Nation. “What to Expect From a Mammoth Disruption of Global Oil and Gas Supplies.” The Nation, March 10, 2026. https://www.thenation.com/article/world/iran-war-oil-gas-supplies-energy/.​

Thomson Reuters. “The US‑Iran War: The Potential Economic Impact and How Companies Can Respond.” Thomson Reuters, March 3, 2026. https://www.thomsonreuters.com/en-us/posts/corporates/iran-war-economic-business-impact/.​

Wikipedia. “Economic Impact of the 2026 Iran War.” Last modified March 2, 2026. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_impact_of_the_2026_Iran_war.​

World Oil / Indopremier. “Oil Shock ‘Largest Supply Disruption’ in History: IEA.” March 11, 2026. https://www.indopremier.com/ipotnews/newsDetail.php?jdl=Oil_shock__largest_supply_disruption__in_history__IEA&news

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Cuba’s Slow Strangulation, and an Empire That Can’t Stop Squeezing

12 Thursday Mar 2026

Posted by xraymike79 in Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Mental Health

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Authoritarian Neoliberalism, Blockade Politics, Caribbean Crisis, Civilizational Unraveling, Climate And Collapse, Cold War Afterlives, Cuban Fuel Blockade, Economic Warfare, Energy Geopolitics, Food And Fuel Insecurity, Fossil Fuel Dependency, Global South Resistance, Imperial Decline, Informal Empire, Late Empire, Migration Pressure, Postcolonial History, Sanctions Regime, Structural Violence, US Cuban Relations

Some catastrophes arrive like explosions; others arrive like a hand on the throat that tightens, loosens just enough to keep the victim conscious, then tightens again. What is happening to Cuba now is the second kind. It is less a “crisis” than the logical endpoint of a relationship Ada Ferrer, in Cuba: An American History, describes as “intimate, explosive, and always uneven”—a history in which the United States could never decide whether Cuba was a neighbor, a colony, or a mirror it couldn’t bear to look into.​

If the Iran war exposes how vulnerable the global system is at its maritime choke points, Cuba reveals something just as important: how an empire behaves when the choke point is not a strait half a world away but an island ninety miles off its own shore. It turns out that the methods are the same—sanctions, blockades, energy as weapon—but the blowback is closer, the hypocrisy starker, and the margin for error smaller.

Cuba’s Fuel Blockade Future

The outlines are simple and brutal. A small, import‑dependent island is strangled of fuel. Power plants shut down or limp along on residual stocks. Blackouts spread—at first rolling, then unpredictable, then so widespread that, for stretches, two‑thirds of the country sits in the dark. Refrigerators warm. Buses disappear. Flights are cancelled. Pumps stop pushing clean water uphill. Food that once moved by truck begins to rot in place. UN officials now warn that tens of thousands of cancer patients are missing treatment, nearly a million people are losing piped water when generators stop, and even humanitarian aid is stuck in port because trucks have no diesel.

None of this is an accident. It is the direct consequence of a policy crafted in Washington and justified, as Ferrer might put it, in the same register that once dressed the Platt Amendment as “protection” and the Bay of Pigs as “liberation.” The embargo that has shadowed Cuba since 1960 has been tightened again and again, but the latest turn of the screw is qualitatively different. It targets the literal fuel lines of the society—shipments of oil from Venezuela, Mexico, and any other state bullied or bribed into compliance—on the explicit theory that enough darkness and scarcity will crack the Cuban government before it cracks the Cuban people.​

If you cared only about overthrowing a regime on a strategist’s whiteboard, you might call this efficient. If you cared about the texture of ordinary life, you would see something closer to slow‑motion warfare: a weaponization of kilowatts and kilometers that treats 11 million people as leverage.

Cuba as American Project

Ferrer’s book is built around a simple but devastating premise: to write the history of Cuba is to write a history of the United States from a different angle. The island has been central to American fantasies and fears since before there was a U.S. flag to fly over it. Thomas Jefferson dreamed of extending his “empire for liberty” across Florida into Cuba. John Quincy Adams compared the island to an apple that nature itself destined to fall into the Union’s hands. Southern planters saw in its sugar fields a chance to expand slavery’s domain.​

Long before 1898, U.S. merchants and shipowners had already plugged Cuba into a transatlantic machine: American hulls carried enslaved Africans to its plantations, American capital financed its mills, and American markets swallowed its sugar. Spain still flew its flag from Havana’s forts, but as Ferrer shows, the island’s economy and future were already wired to the north.​

When Cuban separatists finally rose in earnest against Spain in the late nineteenth century, they did so with a vision that would have horrified both Madrid and Washington: a multiracial republic, formally independent, with neither a king nor a plantation oligarchy at the top. The United States entered that war late, reframed it on its own terms as the Spanish‑American War, and claimed the victory. Spanish flags came down on January 1, 1899, but the flag raised in their place was not the lone‑starred Cuban banner that patriots had died for. It was the Stars and Stripes.​

Independence did not arrive; it was deferred and rebranded. Through the Platt Amendment, Washington claimed the right to intervene in Cuban affairs whenever it saw fit and carved out Guantánamo as a permanent military foothold. American sugar companies and banks flooded in. By the 1920s, vast stretches of cane, rail, and mill lay in U.S. hands; Havana was reshaped to serve tourists and investors, and the countryside was reorganized around seasonal labor, debt, and the volatility of a single export.​

Ferrer is careful not to turn this into a cartoon of passive victims and omnipotent puppeteers. Cuban elites collaborated. Cuban workers, farmers, and radicals resisted. Coups, “authentic” republics, and reformist waves all came and went. But the through‑line is unmistakable: for more than a century, the United States treated Cuba as a project—a place to discipline, develop, entertain, and extract from—not as a sovereign equal.​

The Revolution and the Broken Mirror

The 1959 revolution shattered that arrangement but did not end the entanglement. It reversed the direction of power, even though physical proximity remained, and wealthy U.S. properties were nationalized. The Eagle vanished from monuments. Havana turned from client to antagonist almost overnight. For Washington, a socialist Cuba so close to Florida was not just a security problem; it was an insult, a refusal to accept the gravity that Adams once invoked.​

The Castro government, for its part, turned the island into a laboratory for post‑colonial development: literacy campaigns, agrarian reform, universal health care, an attempt—uneven, often harsh—to redistribute the fruits of modernity to people who had spent centuries picking cane for others. It did all this under permanent siege by its northern neighbor: invasion, assassination attempts, embargo, covert operations, and the constant threat of annihilation during the Cuban Missile Crisis.​

Ferrer’s point is not that the revolution was pure or painless. It wasn’t. But she insists that you cannot understand it, or its aftermath, without setting it against the long backdrop of occupation, sugar dependency, and thwarted independence. What happens when a people who have been alternately courted and trampled by an empire try to write a different script? Cuba is one answer.​

What happens when the empire can’t forgive them for it, even sixty‑plus years on? That answer is being written right now in the darkened streets of Havana.

Energy as Empire’s Last Language

In my Iran essays, the heart of the argument was that a civilization without slack—without spare capacity in its energy systems, soils, finance, or politics—turns every local war into a test of the whole. Cuba shows the same logic at a smaller scale. The island is almost as dependent on imported fuel as a modern industrial country, but without the buffers: no vast domestic fields, no monetary hegemony, no deep capital markets to soak up shocks.

When Washington cuts off oil, it is not just pinching a budget line. It is severing the arteries that keep water moving, food chilled, buses running, and hospitals lit. Blackouts in a wealthy northern city are temporary inconveniences; blackouts in a poor, sanctioned island are existential crises. They turn vaccines into spoiled cargo, surgeries into gambles, and everyday life into a sequence of improvisations around darkness.

There is a grim symmetry here. The United States, which once organized the island’s economy around sugar and steam, now organizes its suffering around kilowatts and barrels. The levers have changed, but the principle has not: control the flows, and you control the future.​​

But the future no longer has room for such games. In a climate‑stressed, energy‑tight world, weaponizing fuel against an island is not clean geopolitics; it is a rehearsal for broader breakdown. Each tanker turned away from Havana is also a signal to every other vulnerable state about the risks of reliance, and to every other major power about the necessity of finding routes and currencies beyond Washington’s reach.

Blowback, Visible and Invisible

The most obvious blowback is migration. Cuba has already sent waves of exiles and migrants northward in every decade since the revolution, each crest driven by some mix of repression, economic crisis, and U.S. policy. A deliberate fuel strangulation all but guarantees new attempts by sea and land. The same politicians who demand “toughness” toward Havana will soon be standing in front of cameras insisting the border cannot cope with the human fallout of their own strategy.​

Then there is legitimacy. Even in a world hardened by Gaza, Yemen, and Iraq, there is something especially naked about starving an entire country of fuel. It is the kind of act that international law was supposed to name and prevent. The UN is already warning in those exact terms: of “possible humanitarian collapse,” of hospitals forced to triage care by generator hours, of aid convoys immobilized because they cannot get diesel. Each blackout in Havana is also another crack in the already fragile story of a “rules‑based order” administered from Washington. If sanctions are the empire’s favorite “non‑violent” tool, it’s because the dying happens offshore, off‑camera, and far from the people signing the orders.

Finally, there is the subtler blowback Ferrer hints at when she describes how Cubans came to see 1898 not as liberation but as theft. Memory accumulates. A people who have lived through slavery, sugar dependency, occupations, revolution, and embargo are not blank slates. They carry stories about who starved them and who stood by. Every night spent in darkness because someone in an office in Washington signed an order will become another story added to that ledger.​

Cuba as Microcosm of Collapse

Seen from a distance, the new Cuban crisis might look like a small, if tragic, side plot in a world preoccupied with larger wars. Seen from closer in, it is a concentrated version of the same themes:

  • A global system that cannot deliver basic security and dignity without continuous extraction and coercion.

  • An empire that reaches for the same blunt tools—blockades, sanctions, proxy pressure—even as those tools corrode the order they are meant to defend.

  • A planet whose physical limits—of energy, climate, and ecology—turn every act of economic warfare into a ripple in a tightly coupled web.

Cuba has been, for centuries, a place where big forces show their hand early: slavery, monoculture, corporate imperialism, Cold War proxy conflict, the false promise of “development” under dependency. It is not surprising that it is now an early stage for energy warfare in the age of climate breakdown.​

In that sense, the streets of Havana today belong in the same mental frame as tankers stalled near Hormuz or farmers in the Midwest staring at fertilizer quotes. The details differ; the structure doesn’t. A civilization that has built its comforts on other people’s precarity is discovering that the line between “over there” and “here” is dissolving.

Cuba’s blackout is not separate from the slow collapse I have been mapping. It is one more facet of the same weather system: a world in which the engines of empire still turn, but with less fuel, less consent, and less time.

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  • 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

  • Mostly Economics – Episode 37
  • Trump’s Cruel Medicaid Work Requirements: Can States Mitigate the Damage?
  • The Trumpers Are Taking Over the Media: We Can Do Something Other than Whine
  • US Escalation in the Caribbean and Latin America – Live Updates
  • May 2026 Jobs Preview: What to Expect
  • Quick Thoughts on the Labor Market: Don’t Buy the Job Openings Hype
  • Deleting Government Data: The Trump Administration Memory Hole
  • Privatization and Climate Risk Will Expand the US Flood Insurance Gap
  • Factory Construction Down Again in April
  • BUYOUTS: Private Equity Reshaping the Economy – June 2026

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

  • Trump’s Art of the Deal Meets Iran’s Long Memory of Foreign Exploitation
  • Two Visions of the US Will Compete at the World Cup
  • The Narco Erasure of Indigenous Mexican Life
  • House Republicans Aim to Cut Election Security Dollars
  • Who Murdered ‘60 Minutes’?
  • Playing With Fire: The Shadowy US ‘Kill Chain’ in Russia
  • ‘No One Is Watching’: How Trump Reversed Biden’s Crackdown on Gun Trafficking
  • Homophobic High: Graduating From High School Under Texas’ Senate Bill 12
  • The USDA Canceled $300 Million in Farm Grants, Citing Fraud. Did It Make Up the Evidence?
  • The Power and Impotence of Vincent Bolloré

RSS Class Warfare Blog

  • Christians Should Not Worry
  • AI Leery?
  • Summer is Coming Which Means an AC Season
  • E Pluribus Unum
  • The Irony is Overwhelming
  • I Am Not Surprised
  • Should We “Follow the Mathematics”?
  • Absolutely Against Government Regulation … Except When …
  • Fine Tune My Ass
  • “Rubio says ‘significant’ progress made in talks with Iran”

RSS Cliff Schecter

  • Iran beat Mali in final warm-up before heading to World Cup
  • US raises pressure on Cuba as it sanctions President Diaz-Canel
  • Sooryavanshi in line for T20 call as India fast-track 15-year-old to top
  • Putin says ‘too early’ to talk about staying in power until 2036
  • French-Iranian Persepolis author Marjane Satrapi dies of ‘sadness’
  • Fireball seen after explosion at Mexico gas facility
  • UN envoys call on Trump to stop Israeli annexation
  • China’s Xi headed to North Korea in bid to shore up ties
  • Kushner Island? Why a planned resort has provoked protests in Albania
  • ‘We are fighters’: Iraq aim to shock rivals at 2026 World Cup

RSS Climate and Capitalism

  • Ecosocialist Bookshelf, June 2026
  • Clive Hamilton’s climate defeatism and moral abdication
  • Temperatures will be ‘at or near record levels’ for next five years
  • Pollution from land use change kills thousands in SE Asia
  • Marxist theory and the global environmental crisis
  • ‘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

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

  • Avoiding 'worse-case' climate warming is big news. But is it true?
  • “Don’t mention the climate!”
  • Any sane foreign policy would put climate risks, not China, at centre stage

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

  • Psychodrama
  • Like a Naked Emperor
  • For the Honored Dead
  • The Coup Abides
  • The Too-Long Goodbye
  • 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

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

  • House Dems Join GOP to Help Advance Deeper US-Israeli Military Integration
  • ‘The People of Lebanon Can’t Wait,’ Says Tlaib After Dem Leaders Join With GOP to Vote Down War Powers Resolutions
  • House Dem Confronts Trump Ag Secretary Over Claim That 4.5 Million Being Kicked Off SNAP is 'Good News'
  • Watchdog Says Don't Let Warner Hide Behind Pulte While Pushing Warrantless Spying Powers for Trump
  • Nearly 100 Trump-Pardoned MAGA Insurrectionists Have Been Charged With Other Crimes: Analysis
  • 'Block Blanche' Campaign Launched After Trump Says He'll Nominate Acting AG to Lead DOJ
  • US Postal Service Sued for Advancing Trump’s ‘Disgraceful’ Assault on Mail-In Voters
  • Raskin Introduces BLANCHE Act to Destroy Trump DOJ's Plot for 'Super Pardon' of President and His Family
  • Over 80% of All US Voters Support Ending Dark Money’s Grip on Democracy
  • 'Gift to Corporate Polluters': Republicans Advance Massive Assault on Wildlife and EPA

RSS Consortium News

  • A Lawless System of Brutality
  • Sumud as Collective Endurance in Gaza
  • Vijay Prashad: Over a Billion Disabled People
  • The World After America
  • Hedges Report: On Mutual Aid & ‘Palaces of the Crow’
  • JOE LAURIA: Mutual Aid or Mutual Assured Destruction
  • Nobody Wants to Live Next to a War Criminal
  • How Britain Turned Terrorism Laws on Activists
  • Craig Murray: The Power of the UK State Over Scotland
  • PATRICK LAWRENCE: The Systematic Murder of International Law

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

  • That time global capitalism converged on a town that now has pop.111
  • Sunday photoblogging: Pézenas at night
  • Sunday photoblogging: Pézenas
  • Pet Haidt
  • Occasional paper: St. Anthony’s Turnip
  • Sunday photoblogging: Canigou with cherries (2)
  • 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

RSS Crooks and Liars

  • On This Day: Shopping Carts Were Introduced
  • Trump’s Slush Fund Has A New Back Door Opening
  • Report: CBS Considering Replacing Anderson Cooper With Joe Rogan
  • Republicans Somehow Still Insist Trump-Russia Investigation Was A 'Coup'
  • McGovern Confronts Rollins: You Kicked Off 700,000 Kids From Food Assistance
  • 'Team Mamdani' Airs Ad During NBA Finals
  • GOP Rep Accidentally Roasts Todd Blanche While Trying To Praise Him
  • Trump Loses His Sh*t After Learning War Powers Aren't A Personal Blank Check
  • Rep. Dean Skewers Todd Blanche Over Redactions Of Epstein Files
  • Virginia Residents Loading Up On ARs As New Gun Law Is Imminent

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

  • Riadh Fakhoury of Vestech Partners Told Investors Big Names Co-Invested and Faces $2.4M Penalty
  • Ross Erskine of LFS Funding Sold Fake Podiatry Clinic Investments as an Unregistered Broker
  • Tai Chi Walking Floods Social Feeds on Thin Evidence While a Wellness Industry Sells the Cure
  • Brent Willis Files Fake DMCA to Erase Reporting on His SEC Fraud
  • Dr. Blake Livingood of Livingood Daily Sold Cancer-Causing Supplements
  • Mike Xu’s GrubMarket Kept Two Sets of Books and Overstated Revenue by $550M to Investors
  • Nathan Fuller of Privvy Investments Raised $12.3M on Fake AI Crypto Bots and Spent It on Gambling
  • Kyle Loftis Passes Away as Cause of Death Remains Unknown
  • UPS Pays $45M to Investors After Hiding a $500M Goodwill Impairment on UPS Freight
  • Foot Locker Pays $148K to SEC After Making 148 Employees Waive Their Whistleblower Award Rights

RSS Daily Kos Comics

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RSS Damn the Matrix

  • On Amazing Techno-fixes
  • more Collapse Early and Avoid the Rush
  • The End is Nigh…
  • Europe on the Brink?
  • SURPLUS ENERGY loops
  • Art Berman getting all philosophical
  • Meet Dr David Unwin
  • Tim Morgan at his best…
  • The Far Right and Inequality
  • American un-critical thinking

RSS Dan Hagen

  • When Roles Reverse
  • Agnes Moorehead and the Invaders
  • The Simple Things
  • Not Your Job
  • One of My Favorite Poems
  • The Warmonger and the Sparrow
  • No Regret, No Anxiety
  • Things Big and Little
  • Calm Your Space
  • Whom to Please

RSS Dangerous Intersection

  • Dissolving Sheep
  • Our Failing Institutions
  • Today’s Predominant Political Category Error
  • The Economics of Sports Betting and State Lotteries
  • Depends Who Said It

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

  • Brave New Alps: New Forms of Rural Resurgence Through Commoning and Care
  • 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

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

  • New book review of The Story of Capital by Matt McManus for Marx & Philosophy Review of Books
  • Book Review: “Capital’s Media, Digital Command, and the Fate of Public Communication: Reflections on David Harvey’s The Story of Capital”
  • 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

RSS David Hilfiker

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RSS David McNally

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RSS David Roberts

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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

  • Scientists warn Trump plan to axe US ocean monitoring system will leave world 'flying blind'
  • SAG-AFTRA Members Approve Four-Year Deal With AI Terms and Pension Merger
  • US actor James Handy stabbed to death, with girlfriend's son arrested
  • Homicide convictions reversed for Colorado paramedics who injected ketamine into Elijah McClain
  • Surprise! S&P will not change its rules to get SpaceX in early
  • Several Women Who Dated Graham Platner Recall 'Unsettling' Behavior
  • Donald Trump Schedules D.C. Rally With Lee Greenwood And Christopher Macchio After Artists Bail On Freedom 250 Concert S
  • Prosecutors lose appeal in Arizona's fake elector case and vow to present it again to a grand jury
  • New '60 Minutes' Executive Producer Sends Out Memo After Scott Pelley Firing, Says Show Will Never Be "Instructed By The
  • Republicans probe China's influence in data center opposition

RSS Democratic Underground – Good Reads

  • Mary Trump - Poisoning America
  • Harry Litman - Blanche's Biggest Boondoggle
  • 'The Leopard Was Always Going to Eat Your Face' - jojofromjerz
  • Trump's name must come off the Kennedy Center by June 12
  • 'House Oversight releases transcribed interview with Epstein's former assistant'
  • Jeff Tiedrich - shut the fuck up about your stupid pool already
  • Black voters spotlight double standard as Karen Bass faces challenge from reality TV star Spencer Pratt
  • 'I'm Trained to Know When Someone is Dying. The White House Needs You to Believe Trump Isn't"
  • 'Greg Bovino's Retirement Plan? Go Full Fascist'
  • The Borowitz Report: Paxton Blasts Talarico's Lack of Criminal Record

RSS Democracy Now

  • Pulitzer Prize-Winning Historian Ada Ferrer on Cuba's Crisis, U.S. Sanctions and Family Separation
  • "Notes from an ICE Chaser": Tracking Trump's Mass Deportation Campaign on the Ground
  • Far-Right Leaders, Including Ex-CBP Chief Greg Bovino, Convene in Portugal for "Remigration Summit"
  • Voices from Delaney Hall: Family and Community Members Demand Release of Loved Ones from ICE Jail
  • Headlines for June 4, 2026
  • The Government Tried to Villainize Us: Broadview 6 Defendants Speak Out After Charges Dropped
  • "Appalling Misconduct": Chicago Federal Prosecutors Under Fire; "Broadview 6" Charges Dropped
  • MAGA Loyalist Bill Pulte Tapped to Be New U.S. Spy Chief, Led Efforts to Target Trump Critics
  • "Fraud on the Court": Even as DOJ Drops $1.8B Settlement Fund, Judge Reopens Case over Collusion
  • Headlines for June 3, 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

  • Colorado Gave $1.3 Billion Carve-out to Oil Companies While Thousands of Dirty Sites Await Cleanup
  • Two Thirds of Reform’s Wales Shadow Cabinet Are Ex-Tories
  • Exclusive: Undercover Investigation Reveals Europe-Wide Motorcycle Emissions ‘Scam’
  • TikTok’s Climate Pledges Collide with Sponsorship of Climate Deniers
  • ‘Economic Reconciliation’ Means Faster Approval Times for Fossil Fuel and Mining Projects
  • Industry-Linked Studies Disproportionately Advocate Meat Consumption
  • The Pathways Alliance Carbon Capture Project Was Always a Boondoggle 
  • Climate Denier Group Pushes States to Embrace Coal Power for Data Centers
  • Reform ‘Advisor’ Launches Climate Denial Group in Poland
  • ‘Be a PleniDude’: How an Italian Oil Giant Conquered TikTok

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

  • “They’re Demonic” – Israel Runs the Gaza Playbook in Lebanon (w/ Rania Khalek)
  • Rania Khalek DESTROYS Piers Morgan As Israel Attacks Lebanon
  • Israel Invades Lebanon Again: The Greater Israel Project That Keeps Failing
  • Iran Is Playing the Long Game to Exhaust the U.S. — So Far It’s Working | Vali Nasr
  • Israel Brings ‘Gaza Doctrine’ to Lebanon: Rania Khalek Reports From Beirut
  • This Isn’t Going the Way Trump Thought. Vali Nasr on Iran’s War Strategy
  • Trump Kills Khamenei — Iran Hits Back | Regime Change War Day 2
  • Iran, Venezuela, Palestine: The Collapse of International Law | Craig Mokhiber
  • ‘There’s Been No Betrayal Here’ | Exclusive w/ Venezuela’s Ex-Foreign Minister
  • Why Israel Has No Future in the Middle East | Nakba Survivor Dr. Ghada Karmi

RSS Dissent Magazine

  • The Left Needs Ideas
  • [EVENT | June 29] America at 250: A Conversation with Adom Getachew, Aziz Rana, and David Waldstreicher
  • Doom Loop
  • The American Revolution in Global Retreat
  • Know Your Enemy: Military Education and American Manhood
  • Resurrecting the Bund
  • Which Way, Western Marxism?
  • George Scialabba’s Lessons in Solidarity
  • Fire Sale
  • Off Track

RSS Dissident Voice

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RSS Do the Math

  • Cerebral Disconnect
  • Two Murphys, Part 5
  • Two Murphys, Part 4
  • Two Murphys, Part 3
  • Two Murphys, Part 2
  • Two Murphys, Part 1
  • Levels of Faith
  • Dumb Geniuses
  • Earth Abides
  • Empty Records

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

  • PCR and Larry Sparano Discuss the Israelization Of the United States
  • The Israel Lobby Destroyed Trump and He Still Sucks Up to The Zionists — The House votes to end the Iran war
  • Greater Israel Marches Forward
  • “You Either Leave Right Now or You Die”
  • UK nurseries told to report ‘racist’ toddlers to police
  • The British Police once the world’s finest now the world’s worst
  • Putin-the Pucillanimous Brings the War Home to Russia
  • Are Big Pharma’s Agents in NIH Still Intent on Killing all of us?
  • Google to Release 64 Million Bacteria-Infected Mosquitoes into Florida and California
  • There was no Lab Leak: COVID-19 was Spread Intentionally on Multiple Continents

RSS Dredd Blog

  • What Happened to Chargaff's Rules? - 4
  • Watching The Arctic Die - 8
  • The Question Is: How Much Acceleration Is Involved In SLR? - 15
  • The Question Is: How Much Acceleration Is Involved In SLR? - 14
  • APNDX Golden Gauges
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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

  • Fighting Fire With Fire
  • Bioprinting Cartilage, Producing Stem Cells Fill Thursday’s Research Schedule
  • Nighttime Temperatures at the Moon’s North Pole
  • NASA Hosts 2026 Review on Advanced Composite Manufacturing
  • Cosmic Origins Community Webinar, June 10, 2026
  • HWO SIG Seminar, June 10, 2026
  • ASTRA Initiative Seminar, June 12, 2026
  • HWO Call for Papers
  • NASA-DARES Draft Strategy Open for Public Comment
  • Annual Student Research Program Commences 

RSS Earth Observatory: Image of the Day

  • Fighting Fire With Fire
  • Bioprinting Cartilage, Producing Stem Cells Fill Thursday’s Research Schedule
  • Nighttime Temperatures at the Moon’s North Pole
  • NASA Hosts 2026 Review on Advanced Composite Manufacturing
  • Cosmic Origins Community Webinar, June 10, 2026
  • HWO SIG Seminar, June 10, 2026
  • ASTRA Initiative Seminar, June 12, 2026
  • HWO Call for Papers
  • NASA-DARES Draft Strategy Open for Public Comment
  • Annual Student Research Program Commences 

RSS Earth Observatory: Natural Hazards

  • Fighting Fire With Fire
  • Bioprinting Cartilage, Producing Stem Cells Fill Thursday’s Research Schedule
  • Nighttime Temperatures at the Moon’s North Pole
  • NASA Hosts 2026 Review on Advanced Composite Manufacturing
  • Cosmic Origins Community Webinar, June 10, 2026
  • HWO SIG Seminar, June 10, 2026
  • ASTRA Initiative Seminar, June 12, 2026
  • HWO Call for Papers
  • NASA-DARES Draft Strategy Open for Public Comment
  • Annual Student Research Program Commences 

RSS Earth Policy Institute Blog

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RSS Ecocide Alert

  • WordPress 7.0 Has Arrived: Here’s Everything You Need to Know
  • Now in the Reader: Bluesky, Mastodon, and the Fediverse
  • Introducing Write: A New Way to Post, Built for Writers
  • Meet WordCamp Agent: A Preview of the WordPress Memory Layer
  • Turn Your Blog Posts Into Podcast Episodes
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  • Blueprints Gallery Is Now Available in WordPress Studio
  • Inside WordPress.com’s Security Response to the Essential Plugin Attack
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RSS Ecohuman World

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RSS Eco-Shock News

  • Radio Ecoshock: Godzilla Heat: London, Moscow, Delhi
  • Radio Ecoshock: El Nino, Data Farms, Compound Crisis
  • Radio Ecoshock: Acute Climate Trouble Starts Now
  • 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

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

  • Coming of age in East LA, unhoused activists in Oakland and a love letter to working-class immigrants
  • Hollywood, Gaza, and the Invisible Blacklist
  • Insecurity now: Vanishing mutual aid, halted family planning, soul-crushing AI jobs
  • Some Minneapolis Donors Have Moved On. The Immigrants Waiting for Help Haven’t
  • In Northern California’s Maternity Desert, a Humboldt Midwife Offers Intimate Births
  • I Work in Hollywood. Everyone Who Used to Make TV Is Now Secretly Training AI
  • Minneapolis survivor stories on NPR, and EHRP contributor wins Pulitzer
  • 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

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

  • In Superseding SPLC Indictment, DOJ Confesses They Made a Big Mistake
  • Todd Blanche Excused Bribery … and Then Trump Gave Him a Promotion
  • Emily Covington Breaks the Rules to Brag that DOJ Doesn’t Have the Goods against SPLC
  • We Can’t Reason Our Way to Morality
  • Democrats Should Give Trump a Choice: Bill Pulte at DNI or Section 702 Reauthorization
  • Already Suspected of Fraud, Trump Attempts to Extend His Con on the Terrorist Slush Fund
  • Trump’s Spinmeisters Pretend Mike Johnson Is a Judge
  • The Bigly-er Colossus
  • There Are 22 Weeks of Potential Crisis and Catastrophe before Election Day
  • The Rush to Disavow the Terrorist Slush Fund

RSS End of More

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RSS Energy Balance

  • "For Our Children's Earth: Building the Soil, Sustaining the Future." A talk given at Braziers Park College.
  • "Becoming Nature Positive" & "Transition Town Reading: What If a Better World Were Possible?" Film double bill, Tuesday June 9th (2026), 7 pm, Reading Biscuit Factory.
  • "Fires & Fascism", film screening options plus Q&A with the film director, Dr Peter Knapp.
  • "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.”

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

  • New Genn Podcast: Prof. Chad Briggs on Cognitive Warfare and Climate Chaos
  • 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

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

  • Not Using Self Check at Safeway is a Political Act.
  • Trump Desperate For Exit From Iran War
  • Opinion. Anti-Semitism: What it is and What it Isn't
  • Ukraine's military has a real Nazi problem
  • Michael Roberts. Global profits: an upward turn?
  • The Efforts the US Mass Media Goes to in Order to Deny There is Such a Thing as a US Working Class.
  • Graham Platner: Another Rising Star Emerges in The Democratic Party
  • Tortured For Trying To Get Food to Starving People. US and Israel, Rogue States.
  • Ken Klippenstein Exclusive: New Intel Agency Eyes AI Data Center Critics
  • Michael Roberts. Edmund Phelps: free markets and inflation expectations

RSS Fair: Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting

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RSS Fairewinds

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RSS Fairfax Climate Watch

  • FondItalia: oltre 19.5 milioni di euro per la formazione aziendale
  • PNRR: I RITARDI CHE METTONO A RISCHIO OPERE, IMPRESE E PROFESSIONISTI
  • Le aziende sanno quando scade il contratto del dipendente. Non sanno se sta bene.
  • Da dicembre 2024 oltre 6.700 imprese hanno beneficiato dei percorsi formativi finanziati con i fondi dell’Avviso FEMI 2025.01. Più di 91mila i lavoratori coinvolti. Ammontano ad oltre 19,5 milioni di euro le risorse che FondItalia ha impegnato, nell’arco di 16 mesi, per finanziare la formazione dei lavoratori delle imprese aderenti al Fondo. Dal 3 dicembre 2024 – data di apertura del primo Sportello dell’Avviso FEMI 2025.01 – all’approvazione dell’ottavo – in data 14 aprile 2026 – il Fondo, promosso da UGL e FederTerziario, ha approvato progetti a beneficio di 6.768 imprese e 91.448 lavoratori su tutto il territorio italiano per un totale di 19.876 moduli formativi. La dotazione economica dell’Avviso è cresciuta inoltre in modo costante, passando dagli 8 milioni di euro iniziali agli attuali 30 milioni. L’aumento dei fondi impegnati e di quelli disponibili riflette la persistente domanda di formazione di qualità delle aziende italiane e un coinvolgimento sempre maggiore del tessuto imprenditoriale su tutto il territorio nazionale. Nord, Sud e Isole e Centro Il Nord guida per numero di imprese coinvolte: 3.529 (52%), per un totale di 49.558 lavoratori (54%). Seguono Sud e Isole, con 1.678 imprese (25%) e 21.487 lavoratori (23%), e Centro con 1.561 imprese (23%) e 20.403 lavoratori (22%). La distribuzione geografica della partecipazione riflette, almeno in parte, la maggiore concentrazione di imprese nelle regioni del Nord, area che si conferma il principale motore della domanda di formazione continua. Tuttavia, i dati evidenziano una significativa presenza di imprese e lavoratori anche nel Centro-Sud. Per quanto riguarda la dimensione delle imprese, l’85% del totale (5.757 imprese) è rappresentato da micro e piccole realtà imprenditoriali, di cui le microimprese costituiscono la quota più consistente, pari al 45% (3.011). Seguono le medie imprese con l’11% (759) e le grandi imprese con il 4% (252). I settori trainanti: commercio, manifattura e costruzioni Le imprese coinvolte nei progetti presentati negli otto Sportelli dell’Avviso appartengono prevalentemente a tre settori: Commercio all’ingrosso e al dettaglio, con 1.484 imprese coinvolte, Manifatturiero (1.457) e Costruzioni (918). Una presenza rilevante si registra anche nei Servizi di alloggio e ristorazione, con 509 imprese, nelle Attività amministrative e di supporto (435) e nelle Attività professionali, scientifiche e tecniche (365). Dati che evidenziano una domanda formativa diffusa non solo nei settori tradizionali, ma anche nei servizi avanzati e nelle attività di supporto al sistema produttivo. Più contenuto, ma comunque significativo, è il coinvolgimento di imprese appartenenti a comparti come Sanità e assistenza sociale (315 imprese), Trasporto e magazzinaggio (257) e ICT e servizi informatici (222), a conferma di un interesse trasversale verso percorsi di aggiornamento e qualificazione delle competenze. «I numeri emersi dopo 16 mesi di attività confermano in modo chiaro la capacità del Fondo di rispondere in maniera concreta alle esigenze formative del sistema produttivo italiano – commenta Francesco Franco, Presidente di FondItalia -. Oltre 19,5 milioni di euro impegnati, 6.768 imprese coinvolte e più di 91 mila lavoratori raggiunti rappresentano non solo un risultato quantitativo importante, ma soprattutto il segnale di una domanda crescente di formazione continua da parte delle imprese. La formazione deve essere un vero strumento di crescita e competitività, accessibile a tutte le imprese, in particolare alle micro e piccole realtà che costituiscono l’ossatura del tessuto produttivo italiano». I temi formativi su cui si concentra la richiesta di formazione negli 8 Sportelli dell’Avviso FEMI 2025.01 sono Salute e sicurezza sul lavoro, Sviluppo delle competenze trasversali, Gestione aziendale. I 6.059 moduli dedicati a Salute e sicurezza sul lavoro evidenziano infatti come le imprese considerino la compliance normativa e la tutela dei lavoratori una priorità imprescindibile. Accanto a questa dimensione, però, si rafforza sempre più una domanda formativa orientata allo sviluppo organizzativo e delle competenze trasversali. Gli Sportelli aperti per l’erogazione delle risorse della dotazione economica dell’Avviso FEMI 2025.01 sono stati fino ad ora otto: il primo approvato l’11.02.2025, l’ultimo il 14.04.2026. «Il nostro obiettivo è dare continuità al finanziamento della formazione delle imprese, offrendo un sostegno duraturo nel tempo – spiega Egidio Sangue, direttore di FondItalia -. Gli ultimi dati confermano che si tratta di una strategia vincente. Proprio in ragione dell’elevato livello di partecipazione e dell’efficacia dimostrata dallo strumento, FondItalia ha prorogato l’avviso FEMI 2025.01 fino a tutto il 2026 con la previsione di ulteriori Sportelli fino al dodicesimo, la cui approvazione è attesa per il 19 novembre 2026». Le priorità dell’Avviso riguardano aree considerate strategiche per il sistema produttivo italiano: aggiornamento e mantenimento delle competenze, nuovi modelli di gestione aziendale, innovazione tecnologica e digitale, sviluppo delle abilità personali, rafforzamento delle competenze linguistiche, supporto all’internazionalizzazione e alla green economy.
  • 3BMETEO: “El Niño: sarà super? Avrà davvero effetti in Europa e in Italia? Facciamo chiarezza”
  • SmartCityLab Milano presenta due incontri imperdibili per il mese di giugno: “Quanto vale davvero la conoscenza?” e “Le foreste marine animali in città”
  • ESET pubblica l’Indice di preparazione informatica delle PMI nel 2026
  • Gruppo Fortidia – Risultati 2025 e Report di Sostenibilità
  • Ad Ancona il summit mondiale sulle vendite: al centro la sfida di attrarre e trattenere i talenti
  • Logista si conferma per il secondo anno consecutivo tra gli “Europe’s Best Employers” del Financial Times e Statista

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

  • Submission to the Irish Regional Assemblies on their Regional Spatial and Economic Strategies
  • The Cost of Growth: Film screening and discussion in Dublin, June 24
  • 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

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

  • Platner’s exGF wrote “I will personally go campaign for Collins” told Times it was a joke.
  • 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

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

  • Campaign Update: Progress on FracTracker’s Community Air Monitoring Projects
  • From Coal Plant to AI Campus: FracTracker Documents Construction at Homer City
  • An update on Southwest Detroit Industrial Impacts: The Zug Island Ruling
  • Introducing the New FracTracker U.S. Data Centers Tracker Dashboard
  • FracTracker’s New Data Tool Visualizes Shell’s Pollution, Violations, and Malfunctions Ahead of Permit Public Hearing (copy)
  • FracTracker’s New Data Tool Visualizes Shell’s Pollution, Violations, and Malfunctions Ahead of Permit Public Hearing
  • Howell Township Data Center Win: $1B Project Withdrawn After Community Meeting on Energy and Infrastructure Impacts
  • Comment Opposing the Southeast Supply Enhancement Project (SSEP) – Clean Water Act Section 404 Permit Application (SAW-2024-01961)
  • Docket No. PHMSA-2025-0050: Comment Opposing LNG by Rail Transport
  • Threats of Permitting New Liquefied Natural Gas Terminals in the Pacific Northwest

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

  • The Roundup Deception: How Monsanto Helped Write the ‘Science’ That Claimed its Weedkiller Was Safe
  • The Hidden Dangers of Antidepressants and Why It’s So Hard to Stop Taking Them
  • A Review of Vaccination and Neurodevelopmental Disorders: A Study of Nine-Year-Old Children Enrolled in Medicaid
  • Video: Patrick Henningsen: Hezbollah Just Drew the Line: Israel Out of Lebanon Completely
  • This Week’s Most Popular Articles
  • The Covid “Killer Vaccine”. People Are Dying All Over the World. It’s A Criminal Undertaking. We Call Upon its Immediate Cancellation!
  • Croácia alerta para os perigos da escalada da retórica anti-Rússia
  • “Total Defense to Europe”. Preparing Combat with a Non-existent Enemy. NATO Military Committee Calls for “National Defense to Include Civilians”
  • Trump Calls Off Netanyahu’s Bombing of Lebanon. Iran Refuses to Negotiate If Attacks on Beirut Continue
  • The Political Cost of Concept Inflation: Precariat and Beyond

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

  • Your local park is bringing in the green (and by that, we mean money)
  • In the Smoky Mountains, a volunteer effort aims to document every species — before it’s too late
  • Blood in the well: One town’s fight against the slaughterhouse polluting it
  • No, rolling back these environmental rules won’t lower your grocery bill
  • New York backtracked on its climate goals. Here’s why.
  • Nebraskans are taking a hard look at data centers
  • Biden’s clean drinking water plan is being rebranded as MAHA
  • Why is this Trump official dead set on saving a failing California dam?
  • The hidden cost of owning an EV: Expensive insurance
  • The fight to protect pollinators and people from the ‘pesticides that are everywhere’

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

  • Science Snippets: Our Connection to Nature is Declining
  • Science Snippets: Earth’s Surface is Crumbling
  • Science Snippets: Studies Warn “Day After Tomorrow” Ocean Current is in Trouble
  • Science Snippets: Warming Ocean Threatens Prochlorococcus
  • Oceans Face Triple Threat: Pollution, Warming Earth, and Biodiversity Loss
  • Science Snippets: Major Report Finds Rising Heat Kills a Person Every Minute
  • McPherson Interviewed by the Homeless Romantic, Chris Jeffries

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

  • Upset For No Reason
  • About That “Self-Awareness” Thing
  • No Conscious Awareness for Me, Thanks
  • The US: No-Go Zone
  • Sometimes It’s Better to Ask a Question
  • Lightness
  • Links of the Month: May 2026
  • What I Should Have Said
  • Outraged Opinions Are Not News
  • AI’s Biggest Beneficiary: Organized Crime

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

  • Character and Destiny
  • Why Do So Many Right Wing Parties Worship America
  • Americans Today Have Little To Be Proud Of
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – May 31, 2026
  • Open Thread
  • Closer to the End of Credit Cycle Phase Two
  • In Defence of Le Mot Juste
  • Western AI Investors Are the Dumbest Money In The World
  • Don’t Believe Weekend “Peace Deal” Leaks
  • Freedom To, Freedom From & Capitalism (Freedom Series #3)

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

  • CCR Condemns New York Officials’ Support of Israeli War Criminals at Israel Day Parade
  • Apocalyptic Dry Non-Stop El-Nino as Climate Change on Continents to 2050?! Part One
  • A Warning to the Civilian Community: Active Threat from the JBLM DES
  • Every Alley Is Stud Alley
  • Hunger Strikes in ICE Detention are Ramping Up from Coast to Coast
  • STREETSIDE: "Books aren't dying!"
  • Summer 2026 National Immigrant Solidarity Network News Alert!
  • Ice Detention Facility Planned for Gilroy, California
  • Energy Shock Ripples Through Global Economy, Pushing Millions Toward Poverty
  • The "Green Voter Guide", published by the Green Party of Alameda County

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

  • The British Right Is Weaponizing Henry Nowak’s Killing
  • Toronto’s Tenant Union Is Just Getting Started
  • The Rise and Fall of Chris Smalls
  • The US House Is Trying to Stop Donald Trump’s War on Iran
  • Pope Leo XIV Against the Market’s Techno-Dehumanization
  • Private Equity Is Making Firefighting Unaffordable
  • A Child of the Weather Underground Looks Back
  • The California Pension Chief Fighting Fossil Fuel Divestment
  • A Socialist Is Taking on the Dem Establishment in Syracuse
  • Spider-Noir Is Just Another Night in Noirtown

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 26 2026
  • Patriarki, Peradaban dan Asal-usul Gender
  • 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

RSS Jonathan Turley

  • Facing the Big Zero: The University of Oregon Grapples With a Budget Crisis After Years of Woke Excess
  • Federal Inspection Reportedly Finds Delaney Hall in Compliance on Virtually All Standards
  • Massachusetts Church Cancels Traditional Fourth of July Celebration “to Better Understand Our Own Whiteness.”
  • A “View from the East Wing”: Jill Biden’s Fantasy Book Tour
  • The Red Apple: Mamdani Announces Possible Transfer of Housing to Tenants
  • The Lawfare Machine: A Dubious Opinion on Abrego Garcia Leads to a Bar Complaint Against Todd Blanche
  • “Grossly Short of Prudent Decision-Making”: Court Halts Kennedy Center Construction and Name Change
  • British Ofcom Investigates Airing of Trump Interview Calling Climate Change a “Hoax”
  • Judicial Whodunit: Federal Judge Given “Private Reprimand” After Holding Sexual Trysts in Chambers…and Then Lying About It
  • Doing the Math: UC Faculty Call for the Return to Standardized Testing After Shocking Decline in Skills

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

  • Taking a break - no post this week
  • South by Southwest: Water crises hit America
  • Fertilizer, Energy and Liebig's Law of the Minimum
  • 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

RSS Lack of Environment

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RSS Law and Disorder

  • Law and Disorder June 1, 2026
  • Law and Disorder May 25, 2026
  • Law and Disorder May 18, 2026
  • 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

RSS Le Monde diplomatique – English edition

  • Empires dismantled
  • Ethnic homogeneity by force
  • Mali divided
  • West Africa's cocaine connection
  • The Russiagate fiasco
  • School for spies
  • When it comes to China, America has a plan
  • Memory battles
  • Poland and Ukraine's painful shared history
  • Colombia's incomplete transformation

RSS Le Monde diplomatique – Open Page

  • Empires dismantled
  • Ethnic homogeneity by force
  • Mali divided
  • West Africa's cocaine connection
  • The Russiagate fiasco
  • School for spies
  • When it comes to China, America has a plan
  • Memory battles
  • Poland and Ukraine's painful shared history
  • Colombia's incomplete transformation

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.

  • on Leo Perutz
  • Fan fiction and the stock market
  • curses
  • Superstition, blessing, and contract: a fantasia on the horror film
  • Olga Tokarczuk uses AI to drive over the bones of her own novels
  • Spending my life reading
  • UGLY STORIES
  • 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

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

  • Bolivia on the Edge
  • In Southampton
  • Ferris Wheel
  • Chattiness
  • Art Not Genocide

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

  • Western hemisphere fact of the day
  • Rubber rationing in World War II
  • My twenty-minute AI talk for the Swedish company Sana
  • Thursday assorted links
  • CA Logic
  • Should we recriminalize marijuana?
  • Law professors prefer AI over peer answers
  • Wednesday assorted links
  • Richard Feynman’s formula for the best holiday restaurant
  • Sentences to ponder

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

  • Invitation To A Turkey Shoot – How To Debunk Climate Denial
  • Media Myopia As We Hurtle Towards Climate Oblivion
  • ‘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

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

  • The Last Colonial Wars
  • BRICS Doesn’t Need a New Bancor
  • The Petrodollar Trap Is Becoming a War Trap
  • When the Empire Becomes the Risk
  • Why This Is Not the 1970s Again
  • America Wanted Submission, China Offered Parity
  • The Crisis Finance Capitalism Can’t Escape
  • Did Xi Really Trade Iran for Taiwan?
  • Swap Lines, Gulf Debt and the Unravelling of Dollar Primacy
  • Wars Are Won by Economics, Not Armies

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
  • LAUNDRYMAN: a new Hertzan Chimera serial-killer 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

  • Israeli restrictions on fuel and supplies have hospitals in Gaza on the verge of shutting down
  • Here is why we sanctioned Hillel at the New School and why students everywhere should follow our lead
  • Digitally annexing the West Bank: Israel moves its theft of Palestinian land online
  • West Bank healthcare workers go on strike as Israel’s financial siege guts the Palestinian health sector
  • How the IHRA definition of antisemitism is being used to criminalize Palestine solidarity across Latin America
  • Palestine is reshaping Democratic Party politics, and nowhere is this clearer than in New York City
  • Will Trump sideline Israel in order to make a deal with Iran?
  • Europe’s new strategy to hide the rot in Israeli society is to scapegoat Itamar Ben-Gvir
  • The time for a U.S. arms embargo on Israel is now
  • Honoring the stories and inspiration of Gaza: an interview with susan abulhawa

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

  • This Day In Iraqi History - Jun 4 Future Premier Jamil al-Midfai led nationalist group seized Tal Afar in attempt to start revolt vs UK Mandate in Iraq
  • US Demands About Iranian Influence In Iraq Causing Disarray Amongst Ruling Shiite Parties
  • This Day In Iraqi History - Jun 3 Ali Hassan al-Majid ordered 1,000 Kurdish villages be destroyed
  • This Day In Iraqi History - Jun 2 UK political officer in Iraq Sir Wilson told Iraqi nationalists an Arab govt would have to wait UK mandate would rule Iraq
  • Iraq Keeps Releasing Old Economic Data As New To Claim Progress
  • This Day In Iraqi History - Jun 1 Farhud anti-Jewish pogrom started in Baghdad
  • This Day In Iraqi History - May 31 Kurdish revolt led by Barzinji put down by UK’s RAF
  • This Day In Iraqi History - May 30 UK-Turkey deal Turkey got 10% of Mosul oil in return for giving up claim to province
  • Review Saleem Al-Khalil, The Race Toward Najaf, Abdul Majid Al-Khoie Amidst Americans, Sistani, and Khamenei, Saleem Al-Khalil, 2024
  • This Day In Iraqi History - May 29 1920 Ayatollah Shirazi issued statement supporting Iraqi independence from UK

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

  • RFK Jr. Seeks Access to Americans’ Individually Identifiable Medical Records for Clues, Using a Bogus Autism and Vaccines Pretext
  • Is Artificial Intelligence Social Evolution and Progress?
  • Fox News Defines Most Americans as Anti-American
  • Links 6/4/2026
  • Iran War: US Attempts Project Freedom 2.0 as Israel Continues Attacks in Lebanon Despite Alleged Ceasefire; Iran Economy Not Harmed by Sanctions, Performed on a Par to Saudis; Rice Prices Jump in Asia
  • Satyajit Das: An Emerging Market Crisis in Oil-Poor Asia?
  • Europe Scrambles to Contain the Energy Shock
  • Coffee Break: Centrist Win in California, AIPAC Loss in New Jersey, Platner Under Seige
  • How Propaganda and False Information Are Undermining Humanitarian Work
  • Links 6/3/2026

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

  • How Billionaires Are Using Data Centers as a Weapon in the Class War
  • 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

RSS Occupy las Vegas

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RSS Occupy Wall Street

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RSS Oddity Central

  • 37-Year-Old Woman Impersonates 12-Year-Old Girl for 14 Months to Deceive Family into Adopting Her
  • Man Builds Autonomous AI-Powered Water Gun Turret to Keep Pigeons Away
  • Mexico’s ‘Field of the Gods’ – A Unique Football Field Inside an Extinct Volcano
  • This Modern Fortress in the Middle of a Russian Field Is the Perfect Zombie Apocalypse Camp
  • Woman Unable to Close Her Eyes Due Botched Operation Now Has to Pay Surgeon for Defamation
  • Enraged by Divorce Filing, Man Tears Down Family Home with an Excavator
  • Man Who Practiced Iron Sand Palm Kung-Fu Technique for 20 Years Has 3-Inch-Thick Palms
  • Australian Designer Sparks Controversy with Real Taxidermied Rats Sewn onto Underwear
  • Supermileage, an Extremely Efficient Experimental Car That Gets 2,145 Miles per Gallon of Fuel
  • High School Students Create the World’s Largest Remote-Controlled Paper Plane

RSS Of Two Minds

  • Choose One: Housing Is Shelter, or Housing Is Just Another Asset in a Bubble Economy
  • AI Data Centers Are Not the Railroads of Today
  • Could Instability Trigger Radical Change In Your Life?
  • Why Is Consumer Sentiment at Record Lows?
  • The Overstuffed Freezer Analogy
  • When Unfairness Is Systemic, the Consequences Are Flight, Resistance, Revolt
  • Inequality, AI and Digital Life Are Undermining Society
  • We've Optimized Fragility, Failure, Denial--and Rage
  • Chaos Unleashed: When "Irrational" Makes Perfect Sense
  • When US Treasuries Play a Reverse Card

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 Paul Haeder

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RSS Paul Kingsnorth – Elswhere

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RSS Paul L. Street

  • Trump Fascism Never Sleeps, ctd. — July 25th Report
  • Cold Truths Behind the Coming Big Biden Butt Kiss
  • Amerikaner Fascisation Marches On: Reflections on an Ugly April
  • Don’t Laugh Off Fascism: Three Key Mistakes on Trumpism-Fascism
  • Bad Thinking: Left, Center, and Right*
  • Putin Leftism and Confused Anti-Imperialism: Reflections on Some Radical Failures Regarding the Ukraine War
  • The “Socialist” Democrats? Seriously? Explaining a Recurrent Republi-Fascist “Smear”
  • No War with Russia: It’s This System, Not Humanity That Needs to Become Extinct
  • Lawlessness in the Name of Law and Order: The Republi-fascist Response to Trump’s Indictment
  • Three Signs of Surrender: Clues to the Lack of Proper Outrage

RSS PBD – Progressive Blog Digest

  • 46
  • HIS LEGACY
  • THE END GAME
  • DISUNIFICATION
  • THE WALL
  • GUILTY!
  • DSM-5
  • MOVING ON
  • 6000
  • CRICKETS

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

  • These Republican Lawmakers Challenged Abortion Bans. Then They Faced Backlash.
  • In This Church, Child Sexual Abuse Has Gone Unchecked for So Long That It Spans Generations
  • I Got Access to Hundreds of Teacher Misconduct Complaints in California — and You Can Too
  • Texas State Takeover of Local School Districts Expands, Raising Concerns
  • Lawmakers Demand Answers After the White House Initiated a $620M Loan to a Firm Tied to Donald Trump Jr.
  • A Low-Income Housing Program Is Pouring Billions Into Housing Many People Can’t Afford
  • Toxic Ground: How Oil Field Pollution Is Threatening Oklahoma
  • After the Trump DOJ Halted Police Reform, This City Stepped In. Then Officers Shot and Killed Katelyn Hall.
  • “No One Is Watching”: How Trump Reversed Biden’s Crackdown on Gun Trafficking
  • More Than $100 Million Was Billed for Medically Questionable Vascular Procedures, Government Watchdog Finds

RSS Project Censored

  • History is Not Past: 250 Years of the US Project and Examining HondurasGate
  • The Project Censored Newsletter—May 2026
  • Climate Gentrification in Atlanta Displaces Black Families
  • California Spends Millions to Continue Incarcerating Aging Women
  • Funding Failures Fuel Wildfire Risk on Tribal Lands
  • How the Democratic Party Lost the 2024 Election
  • The Platform Stealing Zoom Webinars From the Web
  • Reframing Mass Incarceration, Antiracism, and Abolition
  • Forged Signatures, Felled Trees: Adani’s Expansion Into Hasdeo Forest 
  • Kansas Officials Plan to Cover Billion-Dollar Subsidy for Sports Team Worth Billions

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 Question Everything

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RSS R-Squared Energy

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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 31, 2026
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – May 24, 2026
  • Week-end Wrap – Political Economy – May 17, 2026
  • 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

RSS Real-World Economics Review Blog

  • A dominant economic fact of the past half century is . . . .
  • Trickle-down economics, the Swedish way
  • Is the U.S. Trade Deficit a Loss or a Gain?
  • New models constantly renovate poverty
  • Medieval inflation medicine
  • new issue of RWER – #113
  • Weekend read – Who is Neil Lawrence? Or AI and Gardening
  • How economics became a religion
  • What is to be done?
  • Robert Solow kicking Lucas and Sargent in the pants

RSS Red Pepper

  • Zionist pogroms and shepherding outposts in the West Bank
  • The political economy of the manosphere
  • Elections 2026: The political shifts reshaping Wales
  • Cuba stands firm
  • Deviants and trailblazers – review
  • On the radical politics of sobriety
  • 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

RSS Reddit: Environment

  • Mangrove forests are healing after decades of human destruction
  • A judge said the Trump administration can’t dismantle a weather research center. The damage may already be done. The National Center for Atmospheric Research is the latest example of how the Trump administration’s efforts to chainsaw the federal government can happen too fast for the courts
  • Dismay as Trump officials to dismantle key ocean monitoring system
  • Kevin O’Leary says he will shrink his Utah AI data center project after political backlash
  • Trump to Unveil $700 Million Coal Support Plan Using Emergency Powers
  • ‘An equal and habitable world is possible’: academics set out sweeping vision for planetary survival
  • Corporate Resistance to Green Burials and its environmental impact in 'Death Boom' - Official Trailer
  • This giant salmonella-carrying invasive lizard is spreading in Georgia — officials say it must be stopped.
  • Three mule deer are the first animals confirmed to use California's new $20M wildlife bridge
  • Americans Have Grown Dramatically Anti-Data Center in Just Months, Survey Finds

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
  • Cuba shows why having a smaller population is better
  • How bad is the affordability crisis in your country or state?
  • The Beautiful Ones from Universe 25
  • Opinions on Social Security? Is there an alternative that doesn't rely on constant population growth?
  • A Rocket Exploded. We Need to do Math.
  • Looking at population density and associating it with overpopulation should be avoided.
  • This gives me the heebie jeebies
  • There is no such thing as "low demand -> low price" anymore thanks to the high number of humans on this planet.

RSS Republic of Lakotah – Mitakuye Oyasin

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RSS Resilience.org

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RSS Richard Heinberg

  • MuseLetter #398: Small Modular Nuclear Reactors are a Dead End
  • 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

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

  • Trump’s Art of the Deal Meets Iran’s Long Memory of Foreign Exploitation
  • Two Visions of the US Will Compete at the World Cup
  • The Narco Erasure of Indigenous Mexican Life
  • House Republicans Aim to Cut Election Security Dollars
  • Who Murdered ‘60 Minutes’?
  • Playing With Fire: The Shadowy US ‘Kill Chain’ in Russia
  • ‘No One Is Watching’: How Trump Reversed Biden’s Crackdown on Gun Trafficking
  • Homophobic High: Graduating From High School Under Texas’ Senate Bill 12
  • The USDA Canceled $300 Million in Farm Grants, Citing Fraud. Did It Make Up the Evidence?
  • The Power and Impotence of Vincent Bolloré

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

  • ‘Biden’s war’ has become Trump’s – Lavrov
  • US pressure on Modi is ‘futile’ – Putin
  • EU pledges €50 million to Armenian leader ahead of key election
  • Stealth jets, subs, missiles: The sub-continental arms race you can’t ignore
  • How Russian media and experts reacted to Germany’s UN humiliation
  • Xi Jinping to pay state visit to North Korea
  • Israel bombs Lebanon as Hezbollah rejects ‘shameless surrender’
  • Ukraine dismantles monument to legendary Kiev-born writer (VIDEO)
  • German man fined for calling Merz ‘lying Fritz’
  • Why are Americans fleeing their homeland?

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 #23 2026
  • Nobody knows the future of energy
  • Solar, wind, and EVs have knocked out a doomsday climate scenario
  • Fact brief - Do electric vehicles almost always have a lower carbon footprint than gasoline-powered cars?
  • 2026 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming News Roundup #22
  • Skeptical Science New Research for Week #22 2026
  • The next era of Atlantic hurricanes could be far more destructive
  • SkS Housekeeping: Updating the Comments Policy
  • On the death of RCP8.5
  • RCP8.5 Update

RSS Smithsonian – Smart News

  • See the Rescued and Restored 'Alice in Wonderland' Mural Painted for Sick Children at a New York Hospital
  • Scientists Made Sourdough Bread With Yeast Found on Ötzi the Iceman’s Mummified Body
  • NASA Officially Ends the MAVEN Mission Months After Losing Contact With the Mars Orbiter
  • George Washington Recorded a Recipe for Beer While Leading a Militia. Thanks to the New York Public Library, You Can Imbibe That History This Summer
  • Tonga's Enormous Volcanic Eruption Cleaned Up Part of Its Own Methane Emissions in 2022, Hinting at a Way to Fight Climate Change
  • Glittering Gold Can Stay Shiny for Centuries. Scientists Say They've Figured Out Why the Precious Metal Is So Resistant to Tarnishing
  • See the 'Spectacular' Gold-and-Gemstone Ring a Roman Likely Buried for Safekeeping 1,700 Years Ago
  • This American Submarine Lost During WWII—Along With 83 Crew Members—Has Been Discovered in the Pacific Ocean
  • Can a Hedgehog Replace Winston Churchill? See Which Animals May Soon Swap In for Historical Figures on British Pounds
  • Google Wants to Release 32 Million Mosquitoes in California and Florida. Here's Why

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

  • Republicans Weigh Whether Pulte Is a Hill Worth Dying On
  • US Attorney Corruption — Let’s Take It National!!
  • Lindell Is Really Optimistic for Someone Who Just Lost the GOP Gubernatorial Endorsement: A ‘Perfect Scenario’
  • Senate GOP’s Reconciliation Bill Sets a ‘Very Bad Precedent’
  • Cue Up the Mother of All Confirmation Battles
  • TPM Video: Chris Mathias Breaks Down What Ex-CBP Commander Greg Bovino Was Up to at a European Fascist Conference
  • Greg Bovino’s Retirement Plan? Go Full Fascist 
  • Iowa Didn’t Quite Work Out the Way Trump Wanted
  • Democrats on Track to Avoid Being Locked out of Power in California Governor’s Race
  • Grand Jury Corruption Watch

RSS The Agonist Blog

  • Optimisation énergétique : Et si vous laissiez un expert négocier pour vous ?
  • L’Intelligence Artificielle va-t-elle remplacer votre métier ou le booster ?
  • Networking digital : comment se créer un réseau puissant depuis chez soi
  • Devenir une figure d’Influence dans votre niche sans être un expert
  • Rétention client : le secret des entreprises qui durent sans publicité
  • L’art de l’Optimisation : transformez votre site web en machine à convertir
  • Comment l’Automatisation m’a fait gagner 15 heures par semaine
  • Réforme de la facturation : comment s’adapter ?
  • Cbd pour buralistes : s’approvisionner auprès du meilleur grossiste
  • Le guide complet pour l’achat de cbd en ligne : conseils, tendances et nouvelles réglementations

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
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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 June 5 2026
  • Debt Rattle June 4 2026
  • Debt Rattle June 3 2026
  • Debt Rattle June 2 2026
  • Debt Rattle June 1 2026
  • Debt Rattle May 31 2026
  • Debt Rattle May 30 2026
  • Debt Rattle May 29 2026
  • Debt Rattle May 28 2026
  • Debt Rattle May 27 2026

RSS The Big Picture

  • At The Money: Grab Your Summer Rental Soon Now!
  • 10 Thursday AM Reads
  • 5 Things I Am Thinking About
  • 10 Wednesday AM Reads
  • 10 Tuesday AM Reads
  • Transcript: Remembering Jonathan Clements with Jason Zweig and William Bernstein
  • 10 Monday AM Reads
  • 10 Sunday Reads
  • MiB: Remembering Jonathan Clements with Jason Zweig and William Bernstein
  • 10 Weekend Reads

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

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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

  • Book Review “The Outlawed Ocean” by Ian Urbina
  • Underestimating the Challenges of Avoiding a Ghastly Future
  • Motherboards: too complicated to make after oil
  • “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?

RSS The Equation (Union of Concerned Scientists)

  • Making Sense of a Turbulent Global Climate and Clean Energy Landscape
  • Overheating a Water Planet: Warmed Oceans Will Not Be Ignored
  • The Trump Administration Has Launched Its Biggest Threat Yet to Scientific Research. We Can Stop Them.
  • EPA Leadership Strip the Agency of Its Ability to Protect Us from Toxic Chemicals
  • It’s Hurricane Season. How Will FEMA Show up This Year?
  • Nuclear Injustice in New York
  • Science is Rising: Finding our Power to Protect Science and Democracy
  • Your Anti-Disinformation Safety Chain for Danger Season
  • A Scientific Method of Resisting
  • As the Heat Arrives: 7 Things to Know About Energy Affordability and Extreme Heat 

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

  • Mexico seizes suspicious Keytruda in raid to dismantle counterfeit medication ring
  • Fidelity opened account for Epstein, even as outrage grew
  • Patents, prices and court files: How ICIJ used data to investigate an industry that thrives on secrecy
  • Amid a scam crackdown, crypto giants keep fueling bitcoin ATMs
  • WATCH: Inside the Cancer Calculus investigation — a live Q&A
  • Intelligence official Amaryllis Fox Kennedy, a Gabbard ally, leaves two jobs
  • Crypto ATM operator Bitcoin Depot files for bankruptcy
  • Alleged cryptocurrency Ponzi scheme ‘goddess’ extradited from Thailand to face conspiracy charges in US
  • 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

RSS The Great Change

  • The Internet is Unsustainable
  • Hanta Me, Baby
  • Mars or Bust
  • 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

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

  • AUSPOP / CULTURE / Retrospective of Underground Comix Pioneer Gilbert Shelton
  • ALLEN YOUNG / OPINION / June: From shame to pride
  • BRUCE MELTON: UNGINEERING, Not Geoengineering
  • 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

RSS The Raw Story

  • Trump scrapes barrel with D-list rally singers as 'Freedom 250' finally implodes
  • This hero is derailing Trump's juggernaut
  • Trump just reached a 'moment of demarcation' that signals the end is near: biographer
  • Trump stuns analyst during 'pathetic moment' in the Oval Office: 'All completely untrue'
  • More bizarre antics resurface about Trump's controversial pick for spy chief: report
  • Disgraced ex-congressman accused of threatening reporter over inside trading report
  • Staunch Trump ally resigns from Georgia's election board: report
  • Trump's DOJ staring down another loss in a high-profile case against foe: expert
  • Nazi-saluting candidate decamps for Illinois governor race after failed congressional bids
  • Trump suffers another staggering rebuke as House passes Ukraine measure he opposed

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

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RSS The Smirking Chimp

  • America’s Secret Civilian Killings Echo One of Its Darkest Chapters
  • We Are All Scott Pelley
  • The Dwindling Arsenal and the Twilight of the Western Shield
  • Trump Is Forcing Coal Pollution on Consumers and Communities
  • American Empire: An Autopsy
  • After Nearly 25 Years, I Sign Off... Wishing Trump Wasn’t the Horrific Culmination of Our Disastrous ‘War on Terror’
  • Trump Is (Almost) Over
  • Trump Privately Panics As Iran Deal Is Revealed To Be Worse Than One He Tore Up
  • MAGA Fails To Conquer Arts and Music
  • What Would America Look Like Without Citizens United?

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

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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

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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

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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

  • The truth about October 7
  • The Coming War Expansion
  • TRUMP/PUTIN APPROVAL RATINGS
  • Untitled
  • 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

RSS Thoughts On The Roof

  • Punctuated Evolution
  • 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

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

  • Contributor: The overdue rise of the right within mainstream media
  • Contributor: Why do the Republicans have the celebrity candidates?
  • Granderson: The sin of pride has nothing to do with the season of Pride
  • Contributor: James Comey's case will play out in a murky area of the law
  • Letters to the Editor: Recent ruling regarding state bail policies isn't radical. It upholds the law
  • Letters to the Editor: Changes to climate program don't suddenly make California pro-business
  • Letters to the Editor: With Cuba, Trump is just looking for another victim to bully
  • Letters to the Editor: Grade-distribution guidelines can be applied with some nuance
  • Letters to the Editor: Concerns over Trump's nuclear powers grow more serious every day
  • Contributor: Recent assessment of California's water misallocation is the first step toward justice

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

  • Trump Says a Ceasefire in the Middle East Means “Shooting in a Moderate Manner”
  • Trump’s Ex-Border Patrol Chief Joined Portugal Far Right Mass Deportation Summit
  • 3 of RFK Jr.’s Favorite Anti-Vax Studies Are Being Retracted or Scrutinized
  • Pentagon Hires Convicted January 6 Rioter to Counterterrorism Role
  • Trump’s Attack on Medicaid Will Harm Children’s Long-Term Health, Doctors Warn
  • Trump Attacks GOP Lawmakers After House Passes Bipartisan Iran War Resolution
  • Trump Compares UFC “Claw” to Eiffel Tower, Says It May Stay at White House Forever
  • Israel Has Engineered a Deadly Shortage of Medications and Health Care in Gaza
  • RFK Jr. Pursues Federal Government Access to Americans’ Medical Records
  • As Ebola Virus Spreads, We See the Terrifying Effects of Trump Dismantling USAID

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 challenges with TOD implementation in India
  • Deploying public finance to derisk private capital in innovation and infrastructure
  • Implementing TOD in India
  • Weekend reading links
  • The missing link in India's FAR market - a trading platform
  • Applying land value capture to public investments
  • Weekend reading links
  • Some thoughts on sustaining high growth rates in India
  • Update on the AI spending boom
  • The limits to reform as an accounting of activities

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

  • Two visions of the US will compete at the World Cup
  • Resistance is only half the equation
  • The ripple effects of organizing against data centers
  • Pro-Palestine activists arrested blocking New Jersey port
  • An ethically honest Memorial Day
  • The quiet resistance of working-class women in Egypt
  • The “Hitler question” should never justify war
  • Automatic draft registration undoes a victory decades in the making
  • From ICE to Iran, veterans are challenging US militarism 
  • A call for bold action from the Gaza flotilla

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

  • Attention to the Unseen
  • 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 Washington’s Blog

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RSS Water is Life

  • Another World Water Day Gone
  • 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

  • For Springsteen Fans Now Angry with Bruce
  • School Violence and China
  • Why the Ben Franklin Fellowship at State?
  • 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

RSS Web of Debt

  • The AI Revolution: Where Capitalism Meets Socialism: The Abundance Paradigm, Part 2
  • 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

RSS What If?

  • Comet Ice
  • Star Ownership
  • 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

  • The duck situation at Botany Pond. . .
  • Readers’ wildlife photos
  • Thursday: Hili dialogue
  • Jesus ‘n’ Mo ‘n’ Ganesh
  • Readers’ wildlife photos
  • Wednesday: Hili dialogue
  • Statistical misreporting on a new cancer drug: “survival times” misconstrued as “survival rates” or “death risks”

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

  • The June 2026 issue of ColdType is now online
  • UK Lawyers for Israel on notice
  • MPs call for end to Palantir in our NHS
  • Black Agenda Report June 4, 2026
  • US Gives Ukrainian Nazis AI-Guided Drones & Why These Are not Game-Changers
  • UK policing culture – from the Nowak murder to crushing protest – grows ever more rotten
  • Trump’s Iran trap: a war he can’t win, a peace he won’t make
  • Build the New Asia of Our Dreams: The Twenty-Third Newsletter (2026)
  • IOF photo op at Beaufort Castle: Here’s the full story
  • Iran SMASHES US Bases in Kuwait & Bahrain, Trump’s Bluff CALLED | Mohammad Marandi

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

  • Southern California chemical crisis was one warning too many: Millions are living inside a ticking bomb
  • Australia: Queensland teachers in arbitration straitjacket, facing long pay freeze
  • Bridgewater Interiors auto parts workers reject sellout while Dana workers set to vote on contract deal
  • US House approves fraudulent resolution on Iran war
  • 2026 World Cup overshadowed by war, repression and sky-high ticket prices
  • NATO and Ukraine escalate war against Russia
  • A reply to Edward Luce of the Financial Times on youth radicalization
  • Opposition mounts to 4th UAW-backed contract at Nexteer: “They haven't changed anything”
  • ECB reports shift away from US Treasury bonds towards gold
  • American Axle workers defy strikebreaking as workers press for broader walkout across auto industry

RSS Yale Environment 360

  • Humans Are Changing How Nature Smells, With Risks for Wildlife
  • U.S. to Dismantle System Tracking Atlantic Currents That Are at Risk of Collapse
  • Tire Pollution May Threaten Human Health, Study Finds
  • The Pilgrimage to Mecca Is Becoming More Dangerous as Mideast Warms
  • Africa Is Embracing Renewable Energy
  • Supertrawlers Are Taking Antarctic Krill That Whales Depend On
  • The U.S. Senator Who Won’t Shut Up about Climate Change
  • Warming Is Raising the Risk of Encounters With Venomous Snakes
  • Global Coal Generation Declines, Even as China, India Race to Build New Plants
  • A First Among Major Nations, India Is Industrializing With Solar

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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