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The Empire at the Choke Point, Part II: War, Limits, and the Slow Collapse of Modern Civilization

11 Wednesday Mar 2026

Posted by xraymike79 in Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Mental Health

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Agricultural Vulnerability, Climate Breakdown, Debt And Disorder, Ecological Limits, Energy Geopolitics, Fertilizer Crisis, Financial Fragility, Food Insecurity, Fossil Fuel Dependency, Global South Unrest, Global Supply Chains, Imperial Decline, Late Empire, Militarized Finance, Oil Shock Politics, Petrocapitalism, Rules Based Order, Shale Plateau, Slow Collapse, Strategic Chokepoints

Not so long ago, the Iran war could still be treated as a “shock” to the system—a sudden, violent anomaly that spooked traders, sent a few charts vertical, then, we were told, would be absorbed. Oil would spike and settle. Gasoline would lurch higher and then ease. Fertilizer prices would jump and “normalize.” Shipping would reroute. The machine would shudder, spit smoke, and then grind on.

By mid‑March, that story already sounds tired. The Strait of Hormuz is not just “at risk”; it is intermittently choked, with tankers idling or turning away and shipowners talking more about insurance clauses than shipping schedules. Missiles and drones have not just brushed past Dubai and Abu Dhabi; they have hit airports, hotels, and oil and gas facilities. The war has stopped pretending to be containable. It is doing what wars at the throat of the system must do in late empire: pulling back the curtain on how brittle the whole arrangement has become.

What happens when a civilization built on cheap fossil energy, globalized supply chains, and the illusion of a “rules‑based order” runs its jugular through a narrow strait somebody else can close? What happens when you stack that vulnerability on top of a destabilized climate, exhausted soils and aquifers, and an economic order whose main talent is inventing new debts to paper over old ones? The answer is not a neat apocalypse. It is something slower, messier, and harder to turn off.

It looks like this war.

War That Tests the System

When the first U.S.–Israeli waves hit Iran’s refineries, export terminals, and air defenses, the coverage was still drenched in the language of spectacle. Footage of streaking missiles, dramatic studio graphics over the Strait of Hormuz, Pentagon briefings on “surgical” strikes. Markets, we were told, were “volatile” but “resilient.” Oil that had lived in the comfortable doldrums of 70 dollars a barrel surged to the brink of 120, then fell back toward 90. By early March, analysts were estimating that the fighting and de facto blockades had temporarily sidelined close to a fifth of global seaborne oil and gas flows, enough to push benchmark prices up by more than twenty percent in a week. The finance pages gamed out whether this would be another “oil shock,” a “temporary spike,” or merely a “headline risk.”

Within days, the story shifts from a spike to a siege. The IRGC’s drones and missiles have not only harassed shipping lanes; they have damaged terminals, storage tanks, and power plants. Insurance costs for tankers have climbed into the red zone. Some shipowners are simply refusing to transit the Gulf. Emergency meetings of energy ministers and finance officials that were once unthinkable in peacetime have become weekly calendar entries. The International Energy Agency and major importers now talk openly about coordinated releases from strategic reserves—not as a drill but as a lifeline, echoing the playbook dusted off during previous oil shocks.

Central bankers, who spent years pretending that their job was an apolitical exercise in “inflation targeting,” now find themselves back on the front lines of war. Higher oil and gas prices bleed into everything: trucking, aviation, manufacturing, heating, electricity. The inflation they helped smother with interest‑rate hikes suddenly has a new lungful of fuel. Raise rates again to fight that? You risk detonating the debt bombs they left ticking through corporate balance sheets, commercial real estate, overleveraged households, and sovereigns already flirting with default. Loosen policy? You validate price spikes and feed a new wave of asset bubbles.

So we get the familiar dance of statements and counter‑statements. The White House insists the war will be “short” and “decisive.” Energy analysts urge “calm” and stress that “markets are functioning.” Bank research notes speak of “manageable downside risks” while their authors quietly model what happens if Hormuz stays half‑closed for six months and a few more pipelines or LNG trains go offline. Newspapers publish explainers on how much oil and gas normally slips through that narrow strait; maps of alternative routes proliferate in graphics departments like a rash.

In other words: the system is performing its favorite trick, narrating structural crisis as temporary turbulence. But unlike previous rounds, the war in Iran is overlapping with other limits in ways that make that trick harder to sustain.

The Noose Tightens: Energy, Fertilizer, Food

The first essay stopped at the edge of a simple but brutal observation that agronomists and energy analysts have been making for years: modern agriculture runs on fossil fuels twice over. First as fuel—with diesel in tractors, ships, and trucks—and then as feedstock, in the form of nitrogen fertilizers synthesized from natural gas and sulfur scraped from oil and gas streams. Shut or constrict Hormuz, and you do not just squeeze oil exports; you reach into the pipelines and cracking towers that turn fossil carbon into plant nutrients.

That is no longer an abstract chain of causation. Nitrogen fertilizer prices have already jumped in key export hubs and import markets. Farm groups and even cautious agriculture officials admit, in their more candid briefings, that the Iran shock is hitting just as spring planting begins, a double blow for growers who now have to choose between paying through the nose for inputs or gambling on thinner, more precarious harvests. Plants in the Gulf that turn gas into ammonia and urea are not operating in a vacuum; they are tied to the same shipping lanes and risk calculations as crude. Every attack on a tanker, every drone explosion near a port, nudges one more risk‑off decision: a cargo postponed, a shipment rerouted, a plant run at lower utilization because owners would rather hoard gas than sell fertilizer at what they suspect are still too‑low prices.

At the same time, gas prices themselves are surging. In Europe and Asia, utilities that finally clawed their way out of the last price spike are once again bidding against fertilizer plants and industrial users for molecules. In developing countries, governments that subsidize fertilizer to keep farmers from switching off their fields are staring at budget spreadsheets that no longer add up. The logic is merciless: if you cannot afford enough nitrogen and phosphate, you either cut application rates or cut planted area. Either way, there is less food months down the line.

Grain markets have a way of turning distant decisions into street politics. In 2008, and again a few years later, a mix of expensive energy, panicked export bans, and technocratic stupidity turned rising grain prices into riots and toppled cabinets from North Africa to South Asia, as even the World Bank and FAO belatedly acknowledged. The lesson was simple enough: when you weaponize the inputs to food, you are also playing with the wiring of global politics, even if the explosion comes on a time delay. This war repeats the trick with more moving parts. Refineries and LNG terminals go up in flames in March; fertilizer quietly disappears from order books in April and May; by the following year, ministers in Cairo, Tunis, or Dhaka are staring down crowds and pretending not to understand why bread has doubled. The shock does not stay “over there.” It comes back through the side door: in Midwestern farmers staring at doubled nitrogen quotes and empty delivery slots, in grocery aisles where higher prices collide with thinner benefits, in a superpower dimly realizing that the instability it treats as an externality is starting to seep back through its own foundations.

Meanwhile, agronomists warn, the climate is no longer a neutral backdrop. Heatwaves, droughts, and floods are already chewing into yields on every continent. A system that used to assume “bad harvest in one region, made up elsewhere” now lives with the possibility of simultaneous shocks; the UN’s own food agencies have been sounding that alarm for years. Layer an energy‑driven fertilizer crunch on top of that, and you do not just get higher prices; you get a tighter, more explosive linkage between weather and politics.

The Point of No Slack

In a younger, fatter civilization, an oil and fertilizer shock of this magnitude would still hurt, but it would meet some slack: spare capacity in fields, refineries, storage depots, and budgets. There were still new frontiers to plow, higher‑EROI oil to tap, rivers whose dams had not yet been built, aquifers that had not yet been drained. A war at a choke point might bruise the system, but the rest of the organism could compensate.

That slack is gone. We have spent it.

In the background, the clock on the shale boom is ticking. For years, U.S. fracking papered over deeper structural limits, adding roughly eight million barrels per day and letting Washington act as if it had discovered a permanent escape hatch from OPEC and geological reality, as even cautious Energy Information Administration charts now make uncomfortably clear. Industry veterans have been warning that the core shale basins are maturing, that the sweetest rock has already been drilled, that productivity gains are flattening. Now even the industry’s own executives are saying the quiet part out loud. Occidental’s Vicki Hollub has warned repeatedly that U.S. shale growth is close to plateauing, with Permian output likely to peak at just over seven million barrels per day and overall U.S. production topping out around the end of this decade, a timeline echoed in other majors’ investor presentations and in official forecasts that see a national production peak around 2027 before decline sets in. The geopolitical class has clearly gotten the memo, which helps explain the renewed obsession with prying open other people’s taps, from Venezuelan heavy crude to Greenland’s speculative Arctic reserves, even as OPEC’s own reserve figures remain opaque and widely suspected of creative accounting. If Iran’s mayhem drags on while American shale rolls over, the world will discover that the “swing producer” of the 2010s was a one‑off sugar high, not a new normal—and that there are far fewer places left to turn when both geology and politics say no.

Conventional oil discoveries peaked decades ago. What is left to bring online cheaply and quickly are not giant, gushing fields but smaller, deeper, more expensive, more carbon‑intensive plays: shale that depletes fast, offshore basins that require billion‑dollar platforms, heavy and sour crudes that need complex refining. High energy‑return‑on‑investment fuels are steadily giving way to lower‑return sources, a shift even mainstream energy‑economics papers have started to quantify. That does not mean the taps run dry; it means every marginal barrel costs more—in money, in energy, in environmental damage—and leaves less surplus to run the rest of society.

Soils and water tell the same story. The Green Revolution’s jump in yields was bought with fossil fuel embedded in fertilizer, pesticides, irrigation pumps, and machinery. The bill has been coming due in the form of eroded topsoil, salinated fields, rivers that no longer reach the sea, aquifers whose drop is measured in meters per decade. Climate change turns those chronic debts into acute crises as glacier‑fed rivers swing wildly between flood and trickle and rainfall patterns slip their old rhythms.

A system in that condition does not absorb shocks gracefully. It amplifies them. That is why a few weeks of war in the Gulf can move food prices in Cairo or Lagos or Dhaka long before a single ship carrying bread grain is blocked. Traders understand that what matters is not just today’s stock levels but tomorrow’s flows, and that a world without slack will panic more easily and more often.

The Return of the Jungle

For three postwar generations, Western elites wrapped this increasingly precarious arrangement in the language of civility. There was, we were told, a “rules‑based international order.” Disputes would be mediated through institutions; markets would allocate resources efficiently; great‑power competition would be bounded by norms. Wars still happened, but they were either framed as unfortunate anomalies or as “police actions” against rogue states who refused to play by the rules.

The Iran war has torn another strip off that fiction.

What is a “rules‑based order” in which one bloc can unilaterally seize another country’s foreign reserves, starve its population with sanctions, and then bomb its energy infrastructure, all while declaring itself the upholder of law? What is a “rules‑based order” in which the world’s most heavily armed state and its favored client can openly target hospitals, schools, power plants, and apartment blocks from Gaza to Tehran and still be described by mainstream media as “defending themselves”? What is an “order” in which attacks on civilian shipping, airports, and commercial towers are treated as regrettable but acceptable collateral when carried out by friends, and pure barbarism when carried out by enemies?

Strip away the branding, and what remains is the oldest law there is: might makes right, so long as the “right” is dressed up in enough op‑eds and press conferences. The Iran war is not bringing back the law of the jungle; it is revealing that it never left, only changed its clothes.

In that jungle, choke points are hunting grounds. Control Hormuz, or at least deny it to others, and you have a hand on the pulse of energy and fertilizer flows. Control the Red Sea lanes and Bab al‑Mandab, and you can squeeze Europe’s trade with Asia and East Africa. Control rare‑earth mines, chip‑fabrication supply chains, or lithium deposits, and you can dictate the pace and geography of any supposed “energy transition.” Control the platforms on which people talk and trade, and you can decide whose pain is seen and whose is buried in euphemism.

Empires have always fought over such points. What makes the current moment different is not the existence of the jungle but the density of the vines. When everything is tightly coupled—energy, food, finance, information—wars at key nodes no longer just redirect flows; they risk snapping branches.

Symptoms of a Slow Collapse

Collapse is a word people tend to reserve for cinematic scenes: skyscrapers shearing, currencies imploding in a week, governments falling like dominoes. The reality, historically, is slower and less legible from the inside. Systems degrade. Buffers thin. Rituals persist long after their content rots. People adapt to each new absurdity as if it were normal.

From that vantage point, the Iran war reads less like an isolated “crisis” and more like an x‑ray of a civilization already in the early stages of disintegration.

Consider the macro picture. Rich countries carry debt loads that used to be associated with post‑default Latin American states. Interest payments on the U.S. federal debt alone are on track to rival, then exceed, the defense budget and major social programs within a decade if current projections hold. Infrastructure in the imperial core—bridges, water systems, public transit, hospitals—crumbles even as record sums are poured into weapons that cannot reliably defeat cheap drones.

Trust has drained out of institutions. Large segments of Western publics no longer believe what their governments, media, or scientific bodies tell them, often with good reason. Conspiracy fills the vacuum, not because people are irrational but because they are rationally responding to decades of lies and selective outrage. When officials who downplayed Gaza’s death tolls and called for “context” suddenly rediscover humanitarian law over a different set of victims, the hypocrisy is not subtle.

Ecologically, the indicators point in one direction. Emissions keep rising. Biodiversity keeps falling. Heat records are broken so frequently that the phrase “record heat” has become wallpaper. The same governing class that insists it can fine‑tune a delicate global system through interest‑rate nudges also tells us that incremental pledges and future technologies will handle planetary boundaries.

Into that matrix comes a war that does two things at once. It reveals that the empire’s ability to guarantee basic flows of energy and food is weaker than advertised. And it shows that, when challenged, the empire’s instinct is not to rethink its dependence on choke points and fossil fuels but to double down on violence—on sanctions, blockades, bombardment.

This is what early collapse looks like: an order that can still project force and stage spectacles, but can no longer provide rising living standards, reliable infrastructure, or a credible story about the future. It relies increasingly on fear, distraction, and outright coercion to manage populations at home and abroad. It burns legitimacy to buy time, and then discovers that time is not for sale.

No Outside, No Later

One of the quiet assumptions that made the American century feel stable, at least from the metropole, was the belief that there was always an “outside” to absorb damage. Wars were fought “over there.” Resource extraction tore up someone else’s forest, someone else’s delta. Famines, coups, epidemics, and floods happened on other people’s screens. The empire’s role, in its own mythology, was to manage these turbulences from above, adjusting sanctions here, sending peacekeepers there, signing climate accords in well‑air‑conditioned halls.

The Iran war undercuts that geography. Tehran’s black rain is not just a local tragedy; it is a literal aerosol reminder that combustion and contamination do not stop at borders. Smoke from burning depots drifts across regions. Knocked‑out exports ripple into fertilizer shortages, food price spikes, and political unrest continents away. Climate change, already a planetary phenomenon, now interacts with war‑driven scarcity to make once‑localized disasters propagate more widely.

There is, increasingly, no “over there” left. A farmer in Iowa or Iowa’s equivalent anywhere is connected, through fertilizer prices and grain exports, to a missile launch in the Gulf. A commuter in Berlin or Jakarta is connected, through fuel costs and interest rates, to a ship struck near Hormuz. A protester in Cairo facing food inflation is connected, through debt and trade, to bond yields in New York and London.

That is the deeper sense in which this war foreshadows collapse. Not because it will single‑handedly bring the system down, but because it demonstrates how little room to maneuver is left. Each intervention to stabilize one subsystem—energy, say, through reserve releases—tends to destabilize another, by depleting buffers or encouraging further risk‑taking. Each attempt to “send a message” through military force generates new resentments, new arms races, new incentives for others to develop asymmetric tools.

If the old pattern of empire was to externalize costs, the new pattern is that there is nowhere left to externalize them to. The atmosphere, the oceans, the food system, the financial network: they are already full.

Learning to Read the Weather

What does it mean, then, to take this war seriously? It does not mean betting on a precise date for collapse, or fantasizing about a neat before/after moment when the lights go out. It means learning to read incidents like the Iran war not as freak storms but as part of a changing climate.

A grocery aisle stripped of staples in a city that once treated the Gulf as a faraway headline. A corn farmer deciding whether to cut back on nitrogen and accept a thinner harvest so he can make the bank payment. A finance minister in a small, indebted state trying to choose which fuse to light: angrier drivers or hungrier families. A U.S. senator on cable news calling a billion dollars a day in bombing “the best money ever spent” because it might pry open someone else’s oil fields. These are not glitches in an otherwise stable order; they are how a tightly wired, overdrawn system translates distant explosions into everyday life.

From within that storm, the temptation is always to seek reassurance: to believe that this is a phase, that markets will stabilize, that “the adults in the room” have a plan. The more honest reading is harsher and, paradoxically, more freeing. No one is in control in the way we have been taught to imagine. The system is too tight, too complex, too exhausted. Those who benefit most from it are not steering it so much as surfing its remaining waves, trying to stay on top for one more business cycle, one more election, one more contract.

The Iran war shows what happens when such a system meets a determined adversary at one of its choke points. It staggers, it lashes out, it improvises, and it reveals, in the process, just how little redundancy and moral capital remain.

We are not watching the end of the world. We are watching the end of a particular world: the brief, fossil‑fueled, American‑led arrangement in which one bloc could pretend that history had stopped and that the jungle had been tamed. The jungle was just put behind glass for a while. The glass is cracking.

The task, for anyone not invested in the empire’s illusions, is to look through those cracks without flinching. To see that wars like this are not aberrations but expressions. To understand that, in a tightly wired, overheated, overdrawn civilization, there are no local disasters and no permanent shelters. And then, knowing that, to decide how to live in a world where the choke points are not somewhere else on the map, but all around us.

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The Empire at the Choke Point: Oil, Fertilizer, and a World on Rations

10 Tuesday Mar 2026

Posted by xraymike79 in Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Mental Health

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

American Hegemony, Asymmetric Warfare, Civilian Targeting, Climate And Conflict, De Dollarization, Deindustrialization At Home, Dollar Hegemony, Energy Geopolitics, Fertilizer Shock, Food Security Crisis, Global Political Economy, Global South Resistance, Gulf Monarchies, Imperial Overreach, Moral Bankruptcy Of Empire, Petrochemical Dependence, Rules Based Order, Strait Of Hormuz, Supply Chain Fragility, Systemic Risk

Once again the American empire has waded into the Middle East convinced it can redraw the map, only to find that this time the quagmire reaches all the way into its own gas tanks, grocery aisles, and credit markets. Somewhere between the Strait of Hormuz and the trading floors of New York, oil that had idled around 70 dollars a barrel suddenly spiked to nearly 120 before sliding back toward 90, like a seismograph undecided between tremor and quake. Energy desks called it “volatility.” Daniel Yergin, the Pulitzer‑winning oil historian and vice‑chair of S&P Global, called it—carefully, on public television—a “nightmare scenario” in the making. The rest of us will have to survive whatever they choose to call it.

When the first U.S.–Israeli strikes hit Iran’s refineries and export terminals, traders discovered what planners have always known: the global economy has a throat, and it is about twenty‑one miles wide. You can call it the Strait of Hormuz, or you can call it the place where 20 percent of the world’s oil and a fifth of its liquefied natural gas squeeze between Iran and the Arabian Peninsula before fanning out into the arteries of “normal life.” But Hormuz is only the visible pinch point on a longer, fragile spine: from the Persian Gulf and Gulf of Oman, where Iran’s fast boats, missiles, and mines can harass tankers, out into the Arabian Sea, and westward through the Red Sea and Bab al‑Mandab, where Iran‑aligned Houthis—and, if needed, other militias—have already shown they can turn that whole corridor into a killer of ships. Close any one segment for a week and you get a scare at the pump; close or credibly threaten several for a season, and you get history.

War at the Throat of the System

On PBS NewsHour, Geoff Bennett, an avatar of American reassurance, sat across from Yergin and tried to make the chaos sound manageable. Prices had surged overnight “to levels we haven’t seen since 2022,” he noted, before falling sharply by the end of the day; the national average price of gasoline, he added, had already climbed nearly fifty cents since the conflict began. What, he asked, was driving the swings?

What drove prices up, Yergin said, was simple: Hormuz was shutting down—“the biggest oil disruption the world has ever seen.” Not just because of the missiles and drones buzzing the strait, but because of the fear that “very extensive infrastructure on the Arab side of the Gulf” might be next. What drove prices back down was also simple: television demagogue‑in‑chief Donald Trump, flanked by neocon hawks like Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Fox‑studio‑groomed Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, signaling that the war could “soon be over.” Markets do not need coherence; they only need a story that can be traded.

Pressed on his Financial Times warning of a “nightmare scenario,” Yergin drew the contour in a few sentences. The real disaster, he said, would be not a brief scare but “an extended period of the closure of the Strait of Hormuz combined with extensive damage to the infrastructure”—the kind of shock that would send prices well beyond 120, “hit financial markets,” and, as in the 1970s, “push the world into recession.” Even without that full nightmare, he admitted, prices were already “a good deal higher” than before the military buildup, and the lines on the charts were no longer under anyone’s real control.

The empire’s answer has been to fight this asymmetrical war with an outdated playbook. Energy Secretary Chris Wright—another smooth emissary of normality—talked of a “large tanker” that had managed to thread the strait, and Trump mused aloud about providing naval escorts, as if the calendar had flipped back to the late 1980s tanker wars. But the Gulf has moved on. A cheap, laptop‑piloted suicide drone, built from commercial parts and costing on the order of a few tens of thousands of dollars, can now do what a squadron used to: write a red line through a shipowner’s balance sheet. The United States can escort a handful of tankers through Hormuz for the cameras; it cannot escort the actuarial tables of the insurance industry, or the quiet decision of a Greek magnate to sit tight until the sky stops buzzing.​

Even in Yergin’s careful technocratese, the implication is brutal: the system is realizing that the blood flow it depends on runs through a choke point someone else can close, and that carrier battle groups are clumsy instruments against small, disposable machines that arrive in swarms.

When the Fertilizer Stops

The more revealing moment in that PBS exchange comes when Bennett asks where Americans might feel the pain beyond the pump. Yergin dutifully mentions transportation and heating, but then, almost as an aside, he notes that an unnervingly large share of the cost of food is really the cost of energy. The line passes without comment, like a minor statistic. It is actually the hinge that swings the Iran war from an oil story into a food story, and from there into a political one.

Modern agriculture runs on nitrogen and sulfur pulled out of gas and oil. Ammonia and urea, the nitrogen fertilizers that keep harvests from collapsing, are synthesized largely from natural gas; sulfur, another key nutrient and a backbone of phosphate fertilizers, is mostly a byproduct of fossil‑fuel extraction. A war that throttles LNG flows and sulfur shipments out of the Gulf is therefore not just an “energy markets” event; it is a delayed shock to the calories the world expects to eat in six, twelve, twenty‑four months.

There is no strategic fertilizer reserve for this. Around a third of the world’s traded fertilizer nutrients now sit downstream of this war: ammonia and urea from Gulf plants, sulfur stripped out of oil and gas and shipped through the same narrowing strait. With roughly a third of seaborne urea and about half of global sulfur exports effectively trapped behind the disruption, the gas transformed into plant food has been severed from its main shipping route. Russian and Chinese producers are already near the limits of what they can export, and overland workarounds to non‑Gulf ports move only a trickle compared with the millions of tonnes that normally pour through Hormuz.

Agronomists and commodity analysts are already warning that if those flows stay choked through planting season, even “modest” cuts in nitrogen use could mean millions of tonnes of grain that never materialize—a slower‑motion “food price shock” that may prove more destabilising than the crude‑price spike that preceded it. Analysts now talk, a little too calmly, about a coming “fertiliser shock.” With shipping through Hormuz disrupted or priced into the stratosphere, Gulf‑linked fertilizer plants dial back production, export schedules slip, procurement officers in Asia and Africa bid against each other for the remaining cargoes, and farmers from Punjab to the Brazilian cerrado quietly cut application rates. The first sign shows up as a spike in urea futures; the second as thinner harvests; the third as a sharp turn in the FAO’s global food price index that ministries in Cairo, Tunis, or Dhaka cannot ignore.

We have seen this film before. In 2008 and again in the early 2010s, synchronized surges in grain prices—driven by energy costs, export bans, and bad policy—helped trigger food riots and mass protests from Egypt and Tunisia to a belt of some thirty other countries across Africa and Asia. Today’s Iran war bakes in a similar arc: bomb refineries and LNG terminals in March, quietly strip fertilizer off the market, and then field anger in someone else’s capital six or eighteen months later—while insisting, with a straight face, that the connection is mysterious. By then, the blowback is already washing home: American farmers squeezed by doubled nitrogen prices and missed spring shipments, grocery inflation and SNAP cuts colliding in the aisles, and an empire discovering that the unrest it exports will not stop at its own borders.

Tehran Under Double‑Tap Democracy

From Tehran, the nightmare does not begin with a candlestick chart; it begins with a siren and ends with a double tap.​

Mohammad Marandi, a professor of English literature and Orientalism at the University of Tehran and a regular commentator on Western media narratives, spoke to former CIA officer John Kiriakou from a city learning to hold its breath between strikes. The targets, he said, are not just radar stations or missile batteries but the skeleton and nervous system of urban life: apartment blocks, squares, hospitals, schools, stadiums, pharmaceutical factories, Red Crescent headquarters, police stations, national emergency‑service buildings. First comes the bomb that shatters the square; then, when neighbors and first responders claw at the rubble, comes the second wave, aimed at those who tried to help.​

On day one alone, Marandi recounts, U.S.–Israeli strikes hit the Gandhi Hospital in Tehran—targeting its IVF clinic—and an elementary school filled with girls, killing around 168 students and twenty staff, followed hours later by a gymnasium where women were playing basketball and volleyball. Kiriakou, in a separate interview about the same war, is asked to respond to Trump’s televised claim that “the only side that targets civilians is Iran,” that the girls’ school must have been hit by errant Iranian munitions. As an American, Kiriakou says, he wants to believe it was a terrible mistake, “but my brain won’t allow me to believe that.” Given the record in Gaza and Lebanon, he concludes, either Washington or its ally chose that target, and chose it to traumatize Iranians into submission.

The bombs do their work; so does the resistance. Every night, Marandi says, even under bombardment, Iranians gather by the tens and hundreds of thousands in cities across the country: not in one Tiananmen‑style square that can be dispersed, but in dozens of separate assemblies. In Tehran alone, he describes crowds in “20 or so places,” each swelling into six figures, standing their ground while anti‑aircraft and anti‑missile batteries trace frantic arcs overhead. It is not a regime‑scripted tableau; it is a population that has internalized a particular Shia grammar of martyrdom and steadfastness, some of it drawn directly from the assassinated Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, whose biography Marandi sketches in detail.​

Khamenei, he reminds viewers, was not the cartoon villain of Western coverage but a cleric from a poor family who spent time in the Shah’s prisons, fought at the front in the Iran–Iraq war even as president, lost the use of his right arm in an assassination attempt, and remained in his home and office through years of sanctions and threats. He was, Marandi emphasizes, “not afraid to die” and refused to leave Tehran even under bombardment, insisting he would not flee when ordinary Iranians had nowhere to go. Killing him, along with much of his family, has not decapitated the system; it has canonized him as a martyr and hardened the resolve of those who saw him as both religious and political leader.​

The war, in other words, is teaching Iranians something about their enemies that no number of abstract lectures on imperialism could have driven home. Students who once dabbled in Western‑backed protests, he says, now contact him in tears asking how they can atone and help. A generation that had half‑believed satellite‑beamed fantasies about Western concern for human rights is watching, day and night, as that concern vaporizes against the concrete of their own neighborhoods—and with every double tap and denied hospital strike, the American empire trades away another slice of whatever moral authority it once claimed in the region.​

Surviving Is Winning

If the everyday landscape of Tehran is one of double‑taps and defiance, the strategic horizon is simpler. For the United States and Israel, “victory” still means what it meant in Guatemala in 1954 or Tehran in 1953: a toppled government, a purged military, a new client executive smiling from the presidential balcony. For Iran, victory means breathing.

Kiriakou, who spent years inside the CIA’s counterterrorism bureaucracy before turning whistleblower on its torture program, puts it in a sentence. For Washington and Tel Aviv to win, he says, “they have to completely topple the Iranian government and remove all of their leaders,” likely killing “hundreds and hundreds of people,” then install “a pro‑American, pro‑Israeli government in its place.” That is “virtually impossible,” he adds. For Iran to win, by contrast, “all they have to do is survive.” If, at the end of this, there is still an Islamic Republic with functional command structures and enough rockets and drones to hurt its enemies, “Israel and the United States lose.”​

Iran’s military and political leadership are behaving as though they understand this math. They know they are outgunned in high‑end hardware; hypersonic missiles aside, they cannot match U.S. or Israeli avionics and targeting systems. But they do not have to. Instead, they lean into what they do have: cheap, plentiful, reasonably accurate suicide drones and medium‑range missiles that can be guided into U.S. bases across the Gulf, oil facilities in Saudi Arabia, hotels and office towers in Dubai and Abu Dhabi, and, when needed, deeper targets in Israel itself.

As Kiriakou and other analysts note, a one‑way attack drone capable of reaching regional bases or even Israel can cost on the order of tens of thousands of dollars—a Shahed‑class system is widely estimated at roughly 20,000 to 50,000 dollars per unit—while the interceptors that try to stop it run into the millions, and the aircraft, refineries, export terminals, or high‑rise skylines behind them are priced in the billions and collateralized in London and New York. In that landscape, every day the war continues and every successful hit on a “sensitive target”—from the U.S. Air Force base outside Doha to the Fifth Fleet’s headquarters in Bahrain—constitutes a kind of negative‑interest payment the system owes to its own overreach.

Marandi, citing “a significant political figure,” says Iranian planners intend to keep this up “until the midterms in the United States,” explicitly aiming to make the war an issue for voters and investors, not just for generals. The goal is not to destroy the U.S. militarily but to force it and its Gulf clients into a choice: accept real negotiation with an adversary you can no longer bully, or bleed out economically and politically in a conflict you cannot win—while watching, in real time, as investors start pricing U.S. assets as if Washington has stumbled into another forever war, and as the rest of the world quietly recalibrates its view of American power from invincible hegemon to flailing, overleveraged empire.​

The Gulf’s Buyers’ Remorse

If survival is Iran’s bar for victory, survival is also becoming an awkward question for the Gulf monarchies that helped stage this war.

For three and a half decades, from the liberation of Kuwait onward, the ruling families of Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain, and Kuwait outsourced their regime security to Washington. The logic was simple: host U.S. air wings, army brigades, and naval fleets; buy hundreds of billions of dollars’ worth of American weapons; align foreign policy with Washington’s wars; and in return receive a security guarantee—explicit or not—against both external threats and internal upheaval.​​

The Iran war is exposing the cracks in that bargain. Kiriakou spent the weeks before the outbreak shuttling through Dubai, Abu Dhabi, and Kuwait City, listening to local elites ask whether the Americans would really attack. He told them yes, based on what he had been taught inside the Agency: if you want to understand U.S. intentions, “watch the movement of American naval vessels.” Carrier strike groups moved in; war followed.​

What followed next, from the Gulf perspective, was worse. Iranian drones and missiles hit luxury hotels, shopping centers, apartment buildings, oil installations, airports, and U.S. bases. The world’s largest foreign air base, sprawling army facilities with fifty thousand U.S. ground troops, the headquarters of the Fifth Fleet—none of them could stop cheap, one‑way attack drones and salvos of ballistic missiles. A quarter century after Vladimir Putin expressed shock that the Pentagon had no surface‑to‑air missiles defending it on 9/11, Kiriakou notes dryly, “we don’t have surface‑to‑air missiles to protect much of anything that we have.”

For rulers whose citizenry makes up ten or fifteen percent of the population, perched atop vast pools of migrant labor and stateless underclasses, that is not an academic point. Marandi is blunt: these are “family dictatorships” with no deep historical roots or ideological glue; stretch the war out and they may simply not survive. Already, he says, some are phoning Moscow to ask for help, only to be reminded by Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov that they never condemned U.S.–Israeli attacks on Iran and are “the main reason of this war happening.”

Caught between a patron that cannot protect them and a neighbor that can hurt them, the Gulf monarchies will do what they have always done: hedge. That will mean deeper security and energy ties with China and Russia, which are already positioning themselves as mediators and alternative arms suppliers, quiet constraints on U.S. basing rights and operations, and, over time, some form of accommodation with Tehran that trades public hostility for private understandings. The image of the Gulf as a stable, U.S.‑policed “energy supermarket” is gone; in its place is a region where the shelves themselves are recognized as leverage.

Empire at Home: Debt, Decay, and Denial

While Hormuz chokes and Tehran burns, the imperial core continues its strange double life.

On the one hand, the United States is still, on paper, the only country that can fight a war like this. Its defense budget has swollen to roughly a trillion dollars a year, larger than that of the next set of major powers combined. It sustains carrier battle groups on every ocean, maintains hundreds of bases, and can rain precision munitions on almost any point on the globe.

On the other hand, as Kiriakou points out, it has “third world level” airports, crumbling roads and bridges, and hospitals that feel permanently on the verge of collapse. Interest payments on the national debt are projected to hit about a trillion dollars a year by 2026—more than the country will spend on either defense or Medicaid—and to roughly double again by the mid‑2030s, becoming the single largest line item in the federal budget. Donald Trump, who once daydreamed about cutting the Pentagon budget in half, now talks—under the influence of advisers like Rubio and Hegseth and donors like Miriam Adelson—about increasing it by another half‑trillion dollars.​

The same White House that insists it can fight and win a war with Iran in weeks also blocks, or “chills,” a joint bulletin from the FBI, Department of Homeland Security, and National Counterterrorism Center warning of an elevated domestic terror threat linked to that very war. Media reports describe an administration demanding that any product “concerning Iran” be cleared personally, with the practical effect that local law enforcement and the public are kept in the dark about heightened risks to U.S. government facilities, Jewish and Iranian‑American institutions, and critical infrastructure. Better to control the narrative than to confront the consequences.​

Layer on top the slow erosion of dollar hegemony. Iran’s entry into an expanded BRICS bloc—which is on track to account for nearly 40 percent of global GDP on a purchasing‑power basis by the end of the decade—and that group’s halting explorations of a shared currency and non‑dollar settlement systems will not dethrone the greenback tomorrow. But they are part of the same drift the Iran war is accelerating: large commodity producers and populous states asking whether it is wise to keep clearing their trade through a currency whose issuer has a habit of weaponizing its privileges. If the conflict pushes more oil, gas, and fertilizer deals into yuan, rupees, or some future BRICS unit, Washington will have achieved the rare feat of undermining its own monetary power with the same tools—sanctions, asset seizures, military threats—it once used to enforce it.

Cultural Weather: Graded Humanity

Culturally, the Iran war does not just normalize the unthinkable; it clarifies the operating system behind it: a world in which some deaths are treated as events and others as acceptable background noise. For two years, Gaza supplied the template. Western media framed an openly exterminatory campaign as “self‑defense,” gave vastly more emotional and narrative space to Israeli victims than to Palestinian ones, and treated Palestinian casualty figures as inherently suspect even when later confirmed by Israeli officials and independent researchers. The lesson, for anyone watching from the global South, was not subtle: there is a moral caste system, and Gazans are on the bottom.

For anyone who has been paying attention, none of this cruelty is entirely new. A generation ago, Madeleine Albright could tell “60 Minutes” that the reported deaths of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi children under U.S. sanctions were “worth it,” and the remark was treated as a minor scandal rather than a confession. For decades the United States armed and financed death squads from Central America to Southeast Asia, backed dictatorships that filled mass graves, and applied one standard of legality to enemies and another to clients. What Gaza and now Tehran change is not the underlying moral code but its exposure: the same hierarchy of lives is being enforced with a level of ferocity, duration, and live‑streamed documentation that strips away every pretense of “rules‑based” restraint. The barbarity has not suddenly appeared; it has dropped its mask.

The mask does not just slip in dusty archives or leaked memos; it slips live, in high definition. On Fox News, Senator Lindsey Graham recently described Washington’s billion‑dollars‑a‑day bombardment of Iran as “the best money ever spent,” a “really good investment,” because when Tehran’s regime falls “we are going to make a ton of money.” He then laid out the business case: Venezuela and Iran, whose elected leaders Washington has kidnapped or is now trying to overthrow, “have 31 percent of the world’s oil reserves. We’re going to have a partnership with 31 percent of the known reserves. This is China’s nightmare. This is a good investment.” It is Albright’s “worth it” updated for a new century: an open admission that the deaths of children in classrooms and people in apartment blocks are an acceptable price for securing a bigger cut of the world’s fuel.

Tehran extends the Gaza logic from a besieged enclave to a capital city. The same arsenals that chewed Gaza’s hospitals, schools, and apartment towers into dust now turn stadiums, universities, and power plants in a metropolis of ten million into legitimate targets, and much of the Western press falls back on the same reflex: emphasize “Iranian aggression,” minimize the civilian dead, recycle official talking points about “precision” even when the rubble on screen says otherwise. What used to be a seminar debate about a “rules‑based order” has become a live demonstration that, for favored states, the rules are optional; for disfavored populations, even the word “genocide” is treated as a breach of etiquette rather than a description.

This produces two very different psychic climates. In much of the global South, Gaza and now Tehran confirm a long‑standing suspicion that universal values were always a veneer for a hierarchy of “worthy” and “unworthy” victims; the death of a Ukrainian civilian is a violation of civilization, the death of a Palestinian or Iranian civilian is a regrettable data point on a graphic. Among audiences in the metropole, the effect is more corrosive than clarifying: each new atrocity is framed, litigated, and memed until it becomes a genre of content, something to scroll past rather than a crime to stop. What looks, from the outside, like moral bankruptcy looks, from the inside, like fatigue.

Kiriakou’s Los Angeles vignette is not a curiosity but a case study. A few hundred monarchists and their fellow‑travelers, waving Shah‑era and Israeli flags, are asked on camera about the bombing of a girls’ school and reply that “it’s okay,” a sad but acceptable cost of doing business. That is empire’s moral education distilled: people you will never meet, in places you will never visit, can be sacrificed for abstractions like “our credibility” or “regime change.” Marandi, in Tehran, describes a different crowd entirely: ordinary Iranians, who have already absorbed years of sanctions and are now under bombardment, gathering in public spaces under fire to insist, by their sheer presence, that they are not expendable. Those two scenes are not just a split‑screen of this war; they are a portrait of a civilization that has learned to live with its own atrocities, and of those who are forced to live under them.​

The System Writes Its Own Obituary

None of this guarantees apocalypse. The likeliest outcome is not a clean, theatrical end to the American empire but something slower and more squalid: a long, grinding partial closure of Hormuz; a jagged plateau of higher energy and fertilizer prices; a series of recessions and food‑price spikes that topple governments far from the Gulf; a further hollowing out of Western infrastructure and public trust; a gradual hedging away from the dollar; an even more militarized and secretive policy apparatus in Washington and its allies.

In that sense, Yergin’s “nightmare scenario” is too narrow. The real nightmare is not that one regional war briefly “pushes the world into recession.” It is that the war reveals, in accelerated form, what was already true: key subsystems—energy, food, finance, information—have been wired together so tightly, and left so brittle, that any serious shock anywhere now ripples everywhere. A drone operator over the Strait of Hormuz can close a lane of traffic and, a few weeks later, a taxi driver in Cairo finds his fuel bill up by thirty percent and passes the cost on to passengers who were already skipping meals.

The Iran war is not an aberration in that system; it is its expression. It is what you get when a political and economic order built on fossil extraction, covert coups, and selective law decides, yet again, that the answer to every limit is more force. It assumes you can bomb refineries and depots and still have a stable energy market; that you can choke a strait and still have affordable food; that you can loot or freeze other people’s reserves and still have a trusted reserve currency; that you can shred another country’s social fabric and still have a safe, docile homeland; that you can do all of this and still be treated as a referee, not a player.

When it is “over”—when some paper deal is signed, when tankers inch back through Hormuz under heavier escort, when indices and anchors declare that “markets have calmed”—none of the underlying debts will have been paid. The fertilizer that did not ship will still be missing from the soil and from future harvests. The bridges that did not get repaired because the money went to missiles will still sag over their rivers. The trust that drained out of politics and media will not be magically refilled.

You can call that a nightmare scenario if you like. It is also just how this system keeps its books: paying interest on past follies with new ones, rolling over the principal into whatever periphery still has something left to strip. Tehran’s black rain, the empty grocery aisle in a country that thought it was far from Hormuz, the senator on television calling a billion dollars a day in bombing “the best money ever spent” because it buys control over someone else’s oil—these are not side‑effects. They are the weather report of a civilization that turned its choke points into weapons, and is only now discovering that they cut both ways.

References

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The Coup, the Nakba, and the Black Rain

08 Sunday Mar 2026

Posted by xraymike79 in Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Mental Health

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Allen Dulles, Atmospheric Violence, Civilizational Collapse, Climate Chaos, Covert Empire, Energy Geopolitics, Ethnic Cleansing, Fertilizer Shock, Fossil Capitalism, Gaza Genocide, Global Food Security, Imperial Blowback, Iran War 2026, Kermit Roosevelt, Managed Decline, Nakba Continuum, Resistance Politics, Secret Government, Settler Colonialism, Strait Of Hormuz

Tehran’s rain turned black today, a fitting weather report for a civilization still drunk on the very fossil fuels it’s now setting on fire. After the first week of US–Israeli strikes on refineries and oil depots, the Iranian Red Crescent warned residents that the downpour sluicing off balconies and satellite dishes was “highly acidic,” laced with burned hydrocarbons, sulfur dioxide, and nitrogen oxides from the great fire rings encircling the capital. People were told not to go outside, not to run their air conditioners, not to breathe too deeply beneath a sky their enemies had decided to weaponize. The footage that did leak past censors—streets running with flaming fuel, smoke columns punching into low clouds, umbrellas useless under the toxic drizzle—looked less like a modern air war than the planet trying to cough its lungs out.

America did not arrive at this moment by accident, nor did Israel. A country whose secret government learned in the 1950s how to topple elected leaders over oil now targets the petroleum infrastructure of the same nation it “saved” from democracy three generations ago. And a state built on the ethnic cleansing of one people under the banner of “security” now exports that operating logic into another country’s airspace, treating a foreign capital the way it once treated the villages of the Galilee. The black rain over Tehran is more than a war crime in progress; it is blowback vaporized and condensed, falling on the city we remade and then declared irredeemable.

And this new war does not start on a blank slate. It comes directly after Israel’s genocidal campaign in Gaza, where the official ministry tallies of tens of thousands killed—many of them children and women—are now understood as only a fraction of the dead, and conservative analyses drawing on Lancet studies and UN data point to at least 115,000 people killed directly by bombs, bullets, and collapsing buildings, and more than 400,000 Palestinians dead overall¹ once you count those killed by hunger, disease, and the destruction of every system that kept 2.3 million people alive. UN officials described the 2024 siege of northern Gaza as “apocalyptic,” and by August 2025 Israeli siege policies had produced a man‑made famine, with images of starving children becoming commonplace worldwide. Israel has spent an estimated 352 billion shekels (around 112 billion dollars) on the Gaza war, including roughly 243 billion shekels (around 77 billion dollars) in direct defense costs, while the US has poured roughly 31–34 billion dollars into military aid and regional support operations for Israel’s wars since 2023. The UN now estimates that rebuilding Gaza’s blasted cities and infrastructure will cost around 70 billion dollars and take decades, after a campaign that has “significantly undermined every pillar of survival” for its remaining population. The techniques perfected there—prolonged bombardment of dense civilian areas, siege by hunger, deliberate infrastructural annihilation—are the immediate prelude to what is now unfolding over Iran.

The Coup That Wrote the Script

David Talbot’s The Devil’s Chessboard follows Allen Dulles from his days as a Wall Street lawyer for banks and oil companies to his reign as CIA director, where he engineered coups, backed dictators, and helped build an unaccountable “secret government” that often ran ahead of, or against, elected presidents. Nowhere is that clearer than in Iran in 1953.

In Talbot’s account, Dulles arrives at Rome’s Hotel Excelsior just as Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the young shah of Iran, flees there in fear that his dynasty is finished. Back in Tehran, Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh has nationalized the Anglo‑Iranian Oil Company, the British state‑backed giant that controlled Iran’s oil for much of the first half of the 20th century (later becoming BP), and taken his case to the Iranian public; his government rides a wave of popular legitimacy and a simple conviction that 20th‑century Persians should not live as sharecroppers to a British oil monopoly. MI6 and the British establishment see the move as an existential threat, but their embassy has been shut and their networks crippled, so they turn to Washington and the newly empowered CIA.

The Dulles brothers barely bother to disguise their motives. Through Sullivan & Cromwell, a powerful New York–based corporate law firm, they have long represented US oil majors; Allen sits on the board of the J. Henry Schroder Bank, financial agent for the Anglo‑Iranian Oil Company. Both brothers had helped quietly kill a US antitrust case that threatened the giant “Seven Sisters” oil cartel. Mossadegh’s offense is not ideological—it is commercial. He has interrupted a flow of rents from Iranian ground to Western balance sheets. To sell the coup to Eisenhower, Allen and John Foster simply launder oil politics through Cold War language: if Iran falls to nationalism, they warn, it will fall to Communism next; if the Tudeh Party gains, Moscow will control 60 percent of the “free world’s” oil.

The plan they present, drawn up by CIA operative Kermit Roosevelt, becomes a template for a generation of coups. CIA money hires mobs and muscle, corrupts senior officers, and underwrites a campaign of intimidation and murder against those loyal to Mossadegh. General Mahmoud Afshartous, tasked with purging the military of conspirators, is kidnapped and found dumped on a roadside; other loyalists turn up in the mountains with their throats cut. When CIA‑paid crowds finally surge through Tehran and pro‑shah units move, Mossadegh is undone not only by brute force but by his fatal belief that Washington will accept an independent Iran. Ambassador Loy Henderson threatens to withdraw US recognition and evacuate all Americans if Mossadegh does not clear his own supporters from the streets; when he does, Roosevelt’s mobs take their place and tanks drive on his home.

It works. Mossadegh is overthrown, the shah returns on a KLM flight Dulles himself may have helped arrange, and CIA cash ensures there are staged, ecstatic crowds waiting at the airport. The “man of destiny” is restored to his throne; in reality he is now a client monarch, his security apparatus rebuilt and trained by Americans, his country’s oil opened to a new cartel that includes US firms. For Allen Dulles, this is one of his two “greatest triumphs,” alongside Guatemala the next year; for Iranians, it is the moment when a fragile parliamentary experiment is replaced with a police state whose tools—torture, disappearances, one‑party rule—will define their lives for a quarter century.

The blowback is not a mystery. A US‑installed shah rules through SAVAK, jails and kills his opponents, and deepens the perception that sovereignty itself has been outsourced. When the revolution comes in 1979, it is not a polite turnover of elites; it is a volcanic rejection of the 1953 settlement and of the Western powers behind it. The Islamic Republic, with its Revolutionary Guards and anti‑imperialist theology, is the regime that grows in the crater left by Allen Dulles’s “victory.” Every drone flight, every missile launch, every entrenched IRGC network that Washington now condemns is a branch on the tree Dulles planted.

The Ethnic Cleansing Operating System

Ilan Pappé’s The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine uses Israeli archival material to show that the 1948 expulsions of Palestinians were not chaotic wartime accidents but the implementation of a coordinated plan—what he and others link to Plan Dalet—to permanently remove most of the Arab population from the new Jewish state. He traces how a small inner circle around David Ben‑Gurion, known as the Consultancy, shifted from retaliatory actions to a doctrine of initiative and intimidation aimed at making Palestinian life untenable.

The Consultancy listens in December 1947 as intelligence officer Ezra Danin explains that Palestinian rural life is still largely normal; villages greet him as a customer, not an occupier, and there is no general mobilization or offensive intent. If left alone, these people will simply go on living where they are, within the borders of the future Jewish state. This is the problem. The solution, Danin argues, is violent action designed not to answer aggression but to change the mood entirely: destroy lorries carrying produce, sink fishing boats from Jaffa, shut shops, starve factories of raw materials, “terrify” the population so that outside help is meaningless. Ben‑Gurion likes the idea. In a letter to Moshe Sharett, he writes that the goal is to put the Palestinian community entirely “at our mercy,” able to do with them “anything the Jews wanted,” including starving them to death.

What follows is not an accidental fog of war but a campaign of calibrated brutality. Night “violent reconnaissance” raids on undefended villages—Deir Ayyub, Beit Affa—where troops enter after dark, fire on houses, distribute threats, and leave corpses behind. The assault on Khisas, where Palmach units blow up homes at night, killing fifteen people, and Ben‑Gurion later classifies the “unauthorized” operation as a success. In Haifa, Jewish forces use their high ground above Arab neighborhoods to roll down oil‑soaked, burning rivers, ignite streets, and machine‑gun residents as they run out to extinguish the flames. Haganah intelligence officers compile detailed “village files” and, once communities are captured, select men for execution or long detention while others are expelled or packed into camps.

This is not restrained reprisal; it is ethnic cleansing, backed by legal and bureaucratic follow‑through. When refugees try to return in 1949 to harvest fields or retrieve possessions, they are labeled “infiltrators” and frequently shot; homes are demolished to prevent repatriation; a “Minority Unit” of Druze, Circassian, and Bedouin soldiers is tasked explicitly with blocking Palestinian return. In some cases, such as the Christian villages of Iqrit and Kfar Birim, courts briefly side with displaced residents, only for the army to respond by leveling the villages under cover of “military exercises” and fabricating retroactive expulsion orders. The pattern is clear: terrorize, expel, destroy the physical basis of return, then legislate the new demographic reality into permanence.

If the CIA in Talbot’s book is the hand that topples governments for oil and empire, Pappé’s Consultancy is the hand that learns to erase communities and call it security. Both are schools in which today’s war planners were implicitly educated, even if they have never read a page of either book.

Gaza, Then Iran: A Single Arc

The Gaza genocide is the recent culmination of that Nakba logic. As Al Jazeera’s accounting shows, Israel has used an immense share of its national wealth to “level” Gaza and destroy its institutions, killing tens of thousands outright and, on conservative estimates, ultimately hundreds of thousands of Palestinians through direct violence and siege‑induced deprivation, and pushing the survivors into engineered starvation. The Bank of Israel puts the war’s economic toll at around 352 billion shekels (around 112 billion dollars), with roughly 243 billion shekels (around 77 billion dollars) in direct defense costs, while daily spending estimates in early 2025 imply a mechanized routine where, on average, around 100 Palestinians were killed each day for months. The UN’s projection of 70 billion dollars and decades to rebuild only scratches at what it means to strip an entire population of housing, water, sanitation, and schools.

For Washington, the Gaza operation has been an investment as well as a crime: Brown University’s Costs of War project estimates that the US has spent over 21.7 billion dollars in military aid to Israel since October 2023 and another roughly 10–12 billion on its own regional military operations in support of Israel, including in Yemen and Iran. That is the same US polity now underwriting “Epic Fury” in Iran, with the same industrial base profiting from the munitions and the same political class insisting that this is how “civilization” defends itself.

The step from Gaza’s pulverized neighborhoods to Tehran’s black rain is not conceptual; it is logistical. Israel’s army has already normalized the total destruction of dense urban environments, the use of siege to induce famine, and the long‑term crippling of a society’s “pillars of survival.” Extending that logic to the refineries, depots, and industrial plants of a sovereign state—and to the atmospheric consequences that follow—is an escalation of scale, not kind. The Nakba, Gaza, and now Iran form a continuous line of experimentation in how far a settler‑colonial and imperial alliance can go in making other people’s territories uninhabitable.

Two Traditions Converge Over Iran

Fast‑forward to 2026, and those two operating systems—the Dulles coup logic and the Nakba/genocide logic—have fused into a single project.

On the US side, the pattern is recognizably Dullesian: a national security elite steeped in the idea that certain countries are too important to be left to their own politics, especially when hydrocarbons are involved. The immediate pretext today is Iran’s drones, missiles, and nuclear program; the structural fact is that the Strait of Hormuz carries a fifth of global oil and a large share of gas and refined products, and that the region hosts irreplaceable LNG capacity. When war disrupts shipping, Qatar declares force majeure on gas exports after Iranian drone attacks, and Saudi’s Ras Tanura complex goes dark under missile fire, global prices spike and storage tanks back up; the same logic that made Dulles panic about Mossadegh now drives planners to treat Iranian military capacity as an intolerable threat to world commerce.

On the Israeli side, the 1948 template has been portable for decades. Gaza’s repeated pulverizations, the destruction of Lebanese infrastructure in 2006 and again in this war, and the casual talk among ministers about “voluntary migration” for Palestinians all follow the line Pappé traces from Haifa and Safsaf to the Galilee “mopping up” operations. What is new is the geographic ambition. With Tehran’s depots, refineries, and oil docks now deliberately targeted, the tools once used to empty villages and pressure a stateless people are aimed at a regional state of nearly ninety million. Acid rain over a capital is ethnic‑cleansing logic upgraded to atmospheric scale.

The succession in Tehran underscores the perversity of the project. US–Israeli strikes kill Ali Khamenei and much of the senior leadership; Donald Trump and his allies sell the decapitation as an opening for moderation or even regime change. Instead, Iran’s Assembly of Experts elevates Mojtaba Khamenei, the dead leader’s son, a man long entwined with the IRGC’s networks and hardline clerical currents. A revolution that once swore it had ended dynastic rule now becomes a family inheritance precisely because an external shock tips the balance in favor of the security organs and the war party. The pattern is familiar: relentless external pressure cements the most intransigent forces inside a system, in Tehran as surely as in Gaza or Moscow. It is also a specific echo of 1953: American and allied forces once again snuff out a constrained but real space for political contestation and midwife an even more openly authoritarian successor.

Meanwhile, US domestic politics repeats another old script. An interagency bulletin warning of elevated homeland terror risk linked to the Iran war is drafted by the FBI, DHS, and the National Counterterrorism Center, only to be blocked or chilled by the White House, which insists that anything “concerning Iran” be cleared before dissemination. Local law enforcement is kept in the dark so that the administration can avoid admitting that its distant war is raising the threat level at home. The intelligence community is told to mute the connection between an aggressive foreign operation and domestic vulnerability—just as earlier generations were told to ignore or downplay the role of US policy in triggering anti‑American militancy elsewhere. Blowback, once again, is not a lesson to be learned but a reality to be managed through censorship.

War as a Symptom of Civilizational Breakdown

All of this would be grim enough if it were “only” about Iran and the Middle East. But this war sits atop, and accelerates, a broader unraveling of modern industrial civilization.

First, the energy system that underwrites everything else is being weaponized against itself. The same tankers and pipelines that built the post‑war boom are now targets; the Iran war has already suspended around a fifth of global crude and gas supply, as ships avoid Hormuz and producers shut in fields while storage fills. Oil and gas prices jump; power futures for cities like Tokyo spike; import‑dependent economies across Asia and Europe scramble for alternatives in markets already distorted by earlier crises.

Second, the food system that lets eight billion humans stay fed is chained to the same machinery. Modern agriculture runs on nitrogen and phosphate fertilizers made from natural gas and sulfur, much of it sourced, processed, or shipped through the Gulf. Iran is the world’s third‑largest producer of ammonia, and the wider region supplies a large share of global urea and sulfur exports. When war knocks out LNG terminals, disrupts gas flows, and chokes off Hormuz, it does more than raise input prices for a season; it quietly shrinks the amount of food the world can grow months and years down the line. Today’s “global fertilizer supply shock” is tomorrow’s unrest in import‑dependent states from North Africa to South Asia, another round of blowback seeded in fields far from the front. The pattern is familiar from 2008 and the Arab Spring: when global food prices spike, brittle regimes do not just face higher subsidy bills, they face angrier streets. Today’s disruption of Gulf‑linked fertilizer flows is thus not only an agronomic problem but the seeding of future political crises far from the Strait of Hormuz.

This is what collapse looks like from the inside: key subsystems—energy, food, finance—becoming so tightly coupled and so brittle that a single regional war threatens to “bring down the economies of the world,” as Qatar’s energy minister bluntly put it. The war does not create fragility from nothing; it reveals and amplifies fragility that decades of just‑in‑time efficiency, deregulation, and geopolitical gambling have baked in.

Third, the political and informational organs meant to detect and correct danger are themselves compromised. In the US, intelligence about rising domestic terror risk linked to the war is suppressed for political convenience. In Iran, external attack helps install a dynastic hardliner with deep ties to the security apparatus. At the global level, institutions that might once have mediated or constrained this kind of conflict are sidelined. States that solemnly pledge to phase down fossil fuels at climate summits are, within months, using those same fuels and their transit routes as instruments of coercion and siege.

Finally, the ecological base that sustains any complex society is being treated as just another theater of operations. Acid rain over Tehran is not just an environmental accident; it is the direct result of deliberate strikes on oil depots and industrial plants whose combustion products seed toxic precipitation. Historical analogues—from Kuwaiti oil fires to Ukrainian chemical depot explosions—show that such “war weather” leaves long‑lived scars in soils, water, and human bodies. Launching a campaign that knowingly produces black, acidic rain over a megacity is a choice to trade long‑term habitability for short‑term military signaling.

In earlier work I argued that an empire staring down climate chaos and financial exhaustion chose not to slow but to gamble—on carbon capture schemes, militarized borders, and ever more extractive finance. This war is simply that same wager placed in real time. It assumes that the system can absorb: a prolonged interruption of energy flows through its most vital maritime artery; a fertilizer shock that ripples through global harvests; a new hardening of regimes in Tehran and Jerusalem; a further erosion of political trust and institutional competence in Washington and beyond.

The histories Talbot and Pappé excavate show how we got here: by normalizing coups and ethnic cleansing as tools of order, by treating other people’s sovereignty as a tweakable setting in a larger game, by externalizing the costs of “civilization” onto peripheries we assumed would never speak back. Gaza’s genocide and Iran’s black rain mark the point where those peripheries vanish. The atmosphere is shared; the choke points are global; the feedbacks—whether in the form of soot‑laden storms, spiking food prices, or panicked energy markets—arrive everywhere at once.

The black rain over Tehran, in other words, is not just the weather over someone else’s catastrophe. It is civilizational weather, written in the language of blowback. It marks the moment when an order built on fossil extraction, covert empire, and demographic engineering and ethnic cleansing discovers that there is no outside left to dump its consequences into.

The men who ordered this war will tell you it was an emergency, a deviation, a tragic necessity. They will not say that it is the logical expression of the world they built: a world where energy is extracted, markets are sacralized, people are sorted and sacrificed, and any tremor in the periphery is met with airstrikes. They will not say that the missiles over Shiraz and the oil slick in the Strait are the same policy as the eviction notice in Phoenix or the closed clinic in Ohio, just written in a different dialect.

We live, still, as though there were somewhere else to send the costs. For two centuries, the rich world pushed its carbon into the sky, its waste into the sea, its coups and debt and demographic projects into other people’s homelands. The promise at home was that the check would always be mailed to someone else. But the sky is a single system. The food chain is a single system. The weapons supply chain is a single system. There is no longer any “over there” sturdy enough to carry what this order needs to throw away.

The black rain over Tehran is one expression of that closure. The flooded subdivision, the burned town, the empty grocery aisle are others. They are not aberrations. They are how a system this large, this brittle, and this unaccountable keeps its books. The only real decision left is whether we continue to let the same people roll the dice with larger and hotter stakes, or whether we treat this as a final credit‑limit notice from physics and from history.

When power finds itself cornered, it does not reform; it digs in. It narrows the circle of those who decide, expands the list of those who can be sacrificed, and treats each new disaster as proof that harsher measures are required. The question that remains is not just what everyone else is prepared to do, but how much they are prepared to lose, and how late, before they decide that doing nothing costs more.

Notes
¹ Conservative excess‑mortality estimates that correct Gaza Ministry of Health body counts for under‑reporting and add indirect deaths from hunger, disease, and infrastructural collapse now put the toll well into the hundreds of thousands; see Adam Rzepka, “The Real Gaza Death Toll is Impossible to Know Today, But the Minimum Isn’t,” CounterPunch, August 19, 2025, building on recent Lancet analyses and UN data, and Ralph Nader, “The Vast Gaza Death Undercount,” CounterPunch, March 31, 2025.

Further reading

  1. David Talbot, The Devil’s Chessboard: Allen Dulles, the CIA, and the Rise of America’s Secret Government (New York: HarperCollins, 2015).​

  2. Ilan Pappé, The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine (Oxford: Oneworld, 2006).​

  3. “The Cost of Genocide: Israel’s War on Gaza by the Numbers,” Al Jazeera, February 19, 2026, https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/2/19/the-cost-of-genocide-israels-war-on-gaza-by-the-numbers.

  4. “Israel’s War on Gaza: The Human and Economic Cost in Numbers,” International Workers’ Committee for Peace, February 18, 2026, https://iwcp.net/israels-war-on-gaza-the-human-and-economic-cost-in-numbers/.​

  5. “How the Iran War Could Create a ‘Fertiliser Shock’ – An Often Ignored Global Risk to Food Prices and Farming,” The Conversation, January 29, 2026, https://theconversation.com/how-the-iran-war-could-create-a-fertiliser-shock-an-often-ignored-global-risk-to-food-prices-and-farming-277552.

  6. “Iran War Snarls Key Global Hub for Fertilizer Supplies,” Bloomberg, March 2, 2026, https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-03-02/iran-war-snarls-key-global-hub-for-fertilizer-supplies.​

  7. Zachary Folk, “‘Toxic’ Black Rain Falls on Tehran After Oil Sites Struck,” Forbes, March 8, 2026, https://www.forbes.com/sites/zacharyfolk/2026/03/08/black-toxic-rain-falls-on-tehran-after-air-strikes-hit-oil-refineries/.​

  8. “Tehran Shrouded in Toxic Smoke After Israel Strikes Fuel Depots,” Time, March 8, 2026, https://time.com/7383099/iran-news-oil-strikes-tehran/.

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Billion‑Dollar Bets on a Dying World

07 Saturday Mar 2026

Posted by xraymike79 in Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Mental Health

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Civilizational Collapse, End Of The American Empire, Fertilizer Supply Shock, Food Insecurity, Fossil Fuel Civilization, Global Energy Crisis, Global Supply Chains, Gulf Geopolitics, Imperial Overreach, LNG Disruption, Managed Decline, Military Industrial Complex, Multipolar Disorder, Security State Expansion, Stagflation Risk, Strait Of Hormuz, Trillion Dollar Wars, Unauthorized War, US Iran War, US Israeli Alliance

The war in Iran is already built to break things. It is grinding through munitions at nearly a billion dollars a day, rerouting ships around two continents, and quietly starving the fertilizer arteries that make modern harvests possible—all as Washington places yet another unvoted, multi-billion‑dollar bet on the idea that the system can take one more hit. The question beneath all of this is brutally simple: how many more of these bets can a fraying, fossil‑fueled civilization place before it finally hits a limit it cannot bluff or bomb its way past?

Eight days into the US–Israeli campaign, Hormuz has become less a shipping lane than a test of how much risk a fossil‑fueled civilization can absorb. Iran’s Revolutionary Guard claims “complete control” over the strait and has vowed to set on fire any vessel that dares to cross. Tanker traffic has collapsed, maritime insurers have doubled or withdrawn war coverage, and the waterway that once carried roughly a fifth of the world’s oil and gas flows is effectively closed. Saudi Arabia’s Ras Tanura refinery—the beating heart of its export system—has been shut down twice by Iranian drones. Qatar declared force majeure—legal shorthand for saying an unforeseen, uncontrollable event made it impossible to deliver on its export contracts. Analysts now estimate that roughly a fifth of the planet’s crude and gas supply is suspended, either because fields and refineries have had to shut or because there is simply nowhere safe to send the barrels.

Energy prices have reacted immediately. Global oil benchmarks have surged by more than 25 percent since the first strikes, pushing Brent into the low 80s and driving up gasoline and diesel prices from Tokyo to Toledo. European gas prices spiked by more than 50 percent in a single day on news of Ras Laffan’s closure. But these moves, dramatic as they feel to consumers, are only the opening chords. On their own, oil in the 80s and a few weeks of high LNG prices are survivable. What threatens to become truly dangerous is the possibility that the war locks the system into structurally higher prices and chronic uncertainty, at the same time that it quietly sabotages the inputs that grow food.

To understand how far this can go, it helps to mark the thresholds. History suggests that oil at 90–110 dollars for a few months can slow growth and aggravate inflation without collapsing the architecture; the 1970s crises only arrived when prices quadrupled and stayed high for years. Today, analysts at Goldman Sachs reckon that each sustained 10‑dollar jump in oil adds roughly 0.3 percentage points to US inflation and knocks 0.1 points off growth. That is annoying, not apocalyptic. But the war is already flirting with the next band. Hormuz’s near‑shutdown forces Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iraq, and the UAE to curb production as storage fills and tankers stay in port. Qatar’s loss deprives Europe and Asia of a key gas supplier at precisely the wrong time. Oilfields that are shut in cannot simply be flipped back on; depending on age and geology, it can take weeks or months to restore previous flows once the pipelines and loading arms are safe again.

If this continues—if Hormuz remains unsafe, if Ras Tanura and Ras Laffan and other Gulf facilities limp along or stay dark—the world drifts toward a scenario where Brent hovers in the 120–150 dollar range, not for days but for seasons. At that point, energy costs stop being a bad quarter and start becoming the air a recession breathes. High‑income countries can tap strategic reserves and lean on their own production. Import‑dependent states in Asia, Africa, and Latin America cannot. They face soaring import bills, weaker currencies, and the kind of fiscal squeeze that makes debt crises and IMF “rescues” feel inevitable.​

Yet oil is only the most visible part of the story. The deeper fuse runs through fertilizer. The same Gulf that exports crude and LNG also exports the nitrogen and sulfur that underpin modern yields. According to recent trade data reported in The Economic Times and Bloomberg, the Strait of Hormuz handles roughly a third of global fertilizer trade, including about 35 percent of global urea and 45 percent of sulfur exports. Iran is the world’s third‑largest producer of ammonia, and Qatar and its neighbors ship vast quantities of urea, ammonia, and sulfur‑based products worldwide. Those flows are now snarled. Granular urea prices in the Middle East have surged; European ammonia futures have climbed into the 700‑dollar‑per‑tonne range; Indian urea producers are already cutting output as LNG cargoes from Qatar disappear. Russia, despite being the single largest fertilizer exporter, cannot fully backstop these losses because of production bottlenecks, its own export limits, and domestic obligations.​

The timing could hardly be worse. Northern Hemisphere farmers are heading into spring application season now. Fertilizer is not like oil; you cannot simply “catch up” by applying it later. If supplies are tight and prices elevated during planting and early growth, farmers either pay through the nose, cut back on application, switch to lower‑input crops, or leave land fallow. The full effect only shows up months later, when harvests are weighed and markets discover that there is less wheat, corn, soy, and rice than planned. Analysts quoted in the Financial Times and Reuters warn that if this disruption runs through the current planting window, the world could see a food price shock equal to or worse than the one triggered by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

This is the shape of genuine systemic risk: not a single commodity going vertical, but multiple interlocked flows—oil, gas, fertilizer, container shipping—staying kinked for long enough that the fabric starts to tear. Hormuz’s closure forces producers to shut in fields and storage; Iranian drones and missiles hit refineries and LNG trains; ships avoid the Red Sea as Houthis again menace Bab el‑Mandeb, driving container lines like Maersk back around the Cape of Good Hope and adding weeks and cost to global trade. Qatar’s energy minister, not known for alarmism, has already warned that if the war continues “for a few weeks,” it will “bring down the economies of the world,” by which he means push them into a combination of chronic inflation, weak growth, and cascading shortages.

Even the financial plumbing that has long underpinned the American order is starting to flinch. The wealthiest Gulf monarchies—Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar, and Kuwait—are now reviewing tens of billions of dollars in planned and existing investments in the United States and other Western markets as war damage, lost exports, and higher defense spending squeeze their budgets. Sovereign wealth funds built as “rainy day” vehicles are being tapped to plug fiscal holes at home, and officials are quietly signaling that future capital will be redirected toward domestic projects and non‑Western partners rather than automatically recycled into Wall Street. For an empire that has long relied on Gulf petrodollars to finance its deficits and asset bubbles, a war that simultaneously threatens those states’ export arteries and erodes their appetite for US exposure is not just a regional miscalculation; it is another way of sawing at the floorboards beneath its own financial house.​

In Washington, this unauthorized adventure is burning money at a rate that would make even a Pentagon comptroller blink. Because Congress never debated, let alone passed, a new authorization for war with Iran, the administration is operating entirely on the fumes of old Authorizations for Use of Military Force and a creative reading of the president’s Article II powers. There has been no declaration of war and no specific statutory authorization for bombing a sovereign state on this scale; constitutional scholars from the ACLU to former government lawyers have been blunt in calling it illegal. Yet every day, the United States pours roughly 900 million to 1 billion dollars into Operation Epic Fury. Estimates from the Center for Strategic and International Studies, echoed by ABC News and CNN, suggest the first 100 hours cost about 3.7 billion dollars—some 891.4 million per day—in munitions and operations alone. A congressional source has relayed a preliminary Pentagon estimate of roughly 1 billion dollars a day going forward, with Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth hinting the tempo will increase as more bomber missions and missile defenses come online.

Almost none of this is budgeted. CSIS’s breakdown notes that only a sliver of the first week’s spending fit inside existing appropriations; the rest will require supplemental requests to replace thousands of precision munitions—Tomahawks, Patriots, THAAD interceptors—and cover the burn rate of advanced aircraft and naval groups. Pentagon planners are reportedly working on a 50 billion dollar supplemental just to refill missile stocks, and that assumes the war does not expand or drag on beyond the eight‑week horizon some officials are whispering to reporters. That is money Congress has not authorized for this purpose, spent on a war Congress has not formally approved, at a time when lawmakers already profess alarm at deficits and interest costs. It is hard to think of a clearer illustration of what “managed collapse” looks like in fiscal form: unlegislated commitments made on the assumption that someone, somewhere, will be forced to pick up the bill.

The bill is not just monetary. The same unauthorized war powers logic that allows a president to launch a massive air campaign without a vote also normalizes the idea that fundamental decisions about national and planetary risk can be made by a small executive circle and a handful of think‑tank lawyers. The Office of Legal Counsel has, over decades, evolved a test under which presidents are permitted to wage significant military operations without Congress so long as they serve “sufficiently important national interests” and are not expected to rise to the level of “war” in the constitutional sense. In practice, that amounts to: if the president says it is important and thinks he can keep casualties manageable, he can do it. Iran blows that premise apart. The risks of escalation, regional spillover, and major American losses are obvious. That they were ignored tells you a great deal about how degraded the checks on imperial power have become.​

All of this reads like a close‑up of the operating system I have been describing. A war sold as decisive and contained is rapidly turning into an open‑ended drain: on munitions stockpiles, on fiscal space, on shipping routes, on the fertilizers and fuels that keep shelves stocked. Oil in the low 80s is a warning shot; oil sustained north of 120 dollars for six to twelve months, with LNG tight and fertilizer scarce, would be something closer to a slow‑motion heart attack. It would not “destroy” the global economy in the sense of flicking a switch to off. But it would likely drive multiple major economies into synchronized recession, tip heavily indebted, energy‑importing states into default and IMF tutelage, inflate food prices in ways that hit the poor hardest and stoke unrest, and justify further securitization—more border walls, more riot gear, more surveillance—in the name of stability.

And all of it would be framed as unfortunate but necessary side effects of a war that, constitutionally speaking, was never actually authorized. The president spends a billion dollars a day on an illegal war; the war sends oil, gas, and fertilizer prices into the red; the resulting inflation and shortages are used to argue that there is no money for climate transition, no room for expanded social protections, no alternative to tightening belts and tightening controls. That is managed collapse in miniature: the system does not fall by accident, it is steered down a staircase of “tough choices” that somehow always protect the same people.

There is, of course, nothing inevitable about this trajectory. Congress could still claw back its war powers, refuse supplemental requests, and force a halt. Diplomats could, in theory, broker a ceasefire that reopens Hormuz before planting seasons are fully lost. The US could decide that it is not, in fact, worth risking stagflation and food crises in exchange for another symbolic display of air supremacy. But none of those outcomes are consistent with how the American empire has behaved in recent decades. It is far more consistent with its habits to keep bombing, keep spending, keep insisting that victory is around the corner, while supply chains fray and households watch prices climb.

The war in Iran is not yet the event that shuts down the global economy for good. But it is a real‑time demonstration of how little slack remains in the system, and how casually that slack can be burned by leaders unbound by law and insulated from consequence. Oil does not have to stay at 150 dollars forever to break things; fertilizer does not have to vanish completely to starve people. It is enough that prices and shortages cross certain thresholds and stay there long enough to erode what remains of social and ecological resilience.

In that sense, the daily billion dollars Washington is quietly spending on unauthorized war is not just a line item; it is a wager that the machine can take yet another shock without coming apart. Each new strike, each new supplemental, assumes there will always be enough slack in the system—enough credit, enough patience, enough ecological cushion—to absorb the blow. At some point, a civilization this frayed and this fossil‑fueled will place one bet too many—and realize, with perfect clarity and no way back, that the system it kept gambling on has already come apart.

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The Iran War and the Quiet Suicide of Modern Civilization

04 Wednesday Mar 2026

Posted by xraymike79 in Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Mental Health

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Apocalyptic Nationalism, Asymmetric Warfare, Civilizational Collapse, Desalination Vulnerability, Drone And Missile Warfare, End Of Modern Civilization, Energy Security Crisis, Fertilizer And Food Security, Global Supply Chains, Gulf Geopolitics, Late Imperial Wars, Liberal Order Unraveling, Managed Decline, Multipolar World Order, Security State Expansion, Strait Of Hormuz, Technofeudal Capitalism, US Iran War, US Israeli Alliance, Water Scarcity Politics

The likeliest outcome of the US–Israeli war on Iran is not a clean victory for anyone but a grinding, partial, and mutually costly “non‑defeat.” It will leave Iran battered yet intact, the US and Israel strategically weakened, the Gulf and global economy scarred, and the world nudged further into a fragmented, more authoritarian multipolar order. This essay is part of a larger exploration of managed collapse—how late‑imperial wars, techno‑financial extraction, and apocalyptic nationalism fuse into a single operating system that would rather burn the world than relinquish control—and it reads the Iran war not as an exception to that trajectory, but as one of its clearest expressions. The opening weeks of the conflict have already set this pattern. Coordinated US–Israeli air and missile strikes have killed senior Iranian figures, including the supreme leader, and hit Revolutionary Guard bases, nuclear and missile infrastructure, and power and communications networks across multiple cities. Iran has responded with dense salvos of missiles and drones against US bases, Israeli targets, and Gulf capitals, along with attacks on oil facilities, ports, airports, and cloud infrastructure. Commercial traffic through the Strait of Hormuz has effectively halted, insurance markets are in crisis, and rerouted vessels add time and cost by circling Africa. Both sides talk as if decisive outcomes are within reach—Washington and Tel Aviv hinting at the permanent defanging or even collapse of the Islamic Republic, Tehran promising to drive the US out of the region—but the balance of capabilities and constraints points toward something far messier and more symmetrical in its damage.

Air power can devastate, but it is unlikely to decapitate the Islamic Republic. Iran’s state is not a single man or building; it is a dense security apparatus with the IRGC, Basij militias, intelligence organs, and overlapping clerical and political structures that have operated under war and sanctions for decades. Removing a supreme leader and blowing up ministries and headquarters is a heavy blow, but the most probable internal result is not liberalization or collapse; it is consolidation. A harder, more openly militarized regime—a Revolutionary Guard–dominated junta, or some hybrid with clerical cover—will likely emerge, claiming legitimacy from survival under fire and from the blood price paid by the population. In that configuration, rival factions within the elite will have fewer incentives to compromise and more reasons to purge critics, blame internal enemies, and tighten ideological control. The war will give the state a simple story: foreign crusaders tried to destroy us, we survived, and anyone who now questions the line is a traitor. For ordinary Iranians, that translates into more repression, not less. From the US and Israeli perspective, this is already a strategic failure: enormous violence expended, yet the core regime endures and in some respects becomes more rigid and hostile.

Tehran’s external strategy is not to contest US conventional dominance head‑on, but to bleed the periphery and raise the cost of US presence to intolerable levels. Iran and its allied militias are using large numbers of relatively cheap drones and missiles—some costing tens of thousands of dollars—to force the US and its partners to expend interceptors that cost hundreds of thousands or millions apiece. Each wave of Iranian drones and rockets obliges Gulf air defenses and US ships to fire off expensive munitions; even when interception rates are high, the financial asymmetry is ruinous over time. The math is stark: a drone that costs a family home can force defenders to launch interceptors priced like a luxury yacht. Stockpiles of Patriots, SM‑series missiles, and other high‑end weapons are finite and slow to replace; American and Israeli air‑ and missile‑defense capacity has already been strained across multiple theatres. The US industrial base can ramp up production, but adding new lines, training workers, and retooling plants takes years. Every missile fired at a Shahed over Kuwait is one that cannot be sent to another contested theater. Iran does not need to “win” in a conventional sense here. It simply needs to avoid being destroyed while proving that US and allied forces cannot defend themselves and Gulf infrastructure indefinitely without unsustainable expense and diversion of resources.

By choking Hormuz and expanding the target set beyond bases to include oil, LNG, fertilizer, container shipping, and data centers, Iran is weaponizing the geography at the heart of the global economy. The Strait of Hormuz still carries a very large share of the world’s seaborne oil and LNG exports. When commercial shipping through that narrow channel is halted or radically reduced, tankers queue, insurers raise or withdraw coverage, and vessels are rerouted via the Cape of Good Hope, adding weeks of sailing and substantial cost. Those shocks feed directly into global energy prices, already volatile in a warming world. They also ripple into petrochemicals and nitrogen fertilizer: the Gulf region is home to some of the world’s largest fertilizer plants, and Hormuz handles roughly one‑third of global fertilizer nutrient trade and about half of globally traded sulfur, a key input for phosphate fertilizer. There is no global strategic fertilizer reserve to smooth such a break. If these flows are disrupted long enough, farmers half a world away may find inputs unaffordable or unavailable, with reduced harvests showing up months later as higher food prices and shortages. Within the Gulf, the same ports and shipping lanes bring in an overwhelming share of food and consumer goods; the monarchies of the GCC import most of what they eat. Supermarket shelves are only a few weeks of shipping away from being bare if those arteries remain cut.

Layered onto this is the vulnerability of Gulf cities’ water and power systems. Desalination plants—energy‑hungry factories that turn seawater into drinking water—provide the vast majority of municipal supply in several Gulf states, with estimates of 70 to 90 percent dependence in some cases. They are large, immobile industrial complexes, often clustered along the coast in known locations. A handful of well‑placed missiles or drones, or even cyber‑physical attacks, could take key facilities offline for days or weeks. Engineers and disaster‑risk experts have long warned that a determined adversary could, in effect, put millions of people on a countdown to dehydration: without desalination, distribution systems and household tanks drain quickly, and there are no major rivers to fall back on. Power plants feeding those desalination systems and the massive cooling needs of Gulf megacities are also obvious targets. The same is true of the huge data centers that American and global cloud providers have been building in the UAE and other Gulf states, attracted by cheap energy and friendly regulation; some have already experienced disruptions from attacks on regional power and network infrastructure. In threatening oil, gas, fertilizers, food imports, water, power, and data, Iran is not just striking its enemies; it is reaching into the nervous and circulatory systems of a world economy that has made itself dependent on fragile, geographically concentrated assets.

Against this, the United States retains immense latent advantages. Its economy is far larger than Iran’s; its technological base is deeper; its alliance network and global basing give it options Tehran can only dream of. But its war machine was optimized for short, high‑intensity campaigns designed to shock and deter, not for protracted attritional defense against swarms of cheap systems in a theater saturated with fragile, high‑value infrastructure. Sustaining current operations for months or years would require not only money but political willingness to accept rising costs, stretched stockpiles, and the diversion of attention and materiel from other priorities like Asia or domestic renewal. At home, the war lands on a society already weary of Iraq and Afghanistan, anxious about inflation and inequality, and deeply polarized. Even without mass US casualties, a conflict that manifests as higher prices, cyber scares, intermittent base attacks, and a general sense of permanent emergency is unlikely to be popular indefinitely. Congress will intermittently balk at supplemental spending, and factions will leverage the war to press inward‑facing cultural and political agendas. In Israel, the war compounds the trauma of Gaza and earlier conflicts, deepens domestic divisions over the direction of the state, and accelerates diplomatic isolation. In Iran, it reinforces a siege mentality that legitimizes harsher domestic control while rationalizing more aggressive external behavior.

The nightmare escalation path would be a large‑scale ground invasion of Iran. Historically, regime change by air alone has almost never succeeded; Iraq, Libya, and Serbia all required some combination of ground forces, extensive proxy use, or prolonged sanctions and isolation to produce limited and unstable political shifts. Iran is bigger, more populous, more mountainous, and more cohesive than Iraq was in 2003. Its IRGC and allied militias are trained for asymmetrical defense and insurgency. A land campaign would likely require multiple axes—amphibious operations from the Gulf, pushes from the west via Iraq, and extensive airborne moves—supported by massive logistics over long distances under constant missile and drone fire. The risk of heavy casualties and long‑term quagmire would be extreme, and many US officers and analysts know it. Yet the pressures in that direction are real. Gulf rulers and Israeli leaders, facing continued strikes on their cities and infrastructures, will demand a more “decisive” solution if the conflict drags. US political elites who have sold this war as the moment to “solve” Iran once and for all may find it hard to back down openly and accept a stalemate. The sunk‑cost logic of empire—having already paid so much, you cannot stop short—will tempt some toward escalation. If Washington were to cross that line, it might achieve more extensive destruction in Iran, but at the cost of a generational occupation dilemma, enormous bloodshed, and a further plunge in global standing. In that sense, the very pursuit of victory would lock in a long strategic loss.

Even if ground invasion is avoided and the war remains an air‑and‑proxy contest, the geopolitical and economic map will not snap back to its prewar shape. The aura of unchallengeable US deterrence has already been punctured by visible failures of interception, base evacuations, and the sheer inability to keep Gulf airspace and shipping fully secure. Allies and partners, from Europe to Asia to the smaller Gulf monarchies, are watching closely. For many, this war confirms that American power remains formidable but is no longer singularly stabilizing or reliably wise. They will hedge accordingly: deepening deals with China and Russia, building out their own defense industries, exploring alternative payment systems and currencies, and quietly lowering their exposure to US sanctions risk. The conflict accelerates a transition already underway, from a US‑centered unipolar order to a messy, contested multipolarity in which Washington’s tools of influence—sanctions, security guarantees, control over financial plumbing—still matter but no longer dominate unchallenged. Iran, for its part, will likely emerge more dependent on and integrated with other revisionist powers, more committed to drones, missiles, and proxy networks, and more convinced that only such tools keep it alive.

Domestically, the war will push all involved societies toward greater securitization. In the United States, wartime emergency measures—expanded surveillance authorities, broader definitions of “extremism,” harsher penalties for leaks and protests—will find new justifications and institutional footholds. Some of these will be rolled back on paper as the war cools, but many will remain embedded in practice. In Israel and Iran, already heavily militarized politics will harden further, with dissent more easily framed as disloyalty in a time of existential struggle. The same is true, to lesser degrees, in Gulf states that will use the crisis to crack down on restive populations and labor forces under the pretext of security. These shifts do not just constrain individuals; they shape the future of governance itself, making it more normal to treat citizens as potential threats to be monitored and managed. That is exactly the kind of juridical‑security operating system I have been tracking: an order in which states and their corporate partners reserve ever greater discretion to act in the name of “stability” while insulating themselves from accountability.

Seen from the vantage point of civilizational collapse, this war is less an aberration than an expression of the underlying trajectory. A high‑energy, fossil‑driven industrial civilization that has overshot planetary boundaries is desperately trying to hold onto the foundations it built itself on: oil, gas, global shipping, synthetic fertilizers, and cloud infrastructure powered by cheap hydrocarbons. The US–Iran conflict is, at base, a struggle over those foundations—a fight over who controls which valves and straits, which grids and nodes, in a context where the overall system is becoming less stable and more ecologically untenable. Rather than treating this fragility as a warning to decarbonize and localize, major powers are doubling down on militarizing chokepoints and hardening vulnerable infrastructure. Money and engineering talent that could have gone into redesigning food systems, water use, and energy grids for a hotter, more volatile world are instead poured into missile defenses, hardened bunkers, and redundant data centers in new but equally exposed locations. Every barrel burned to move a carrier group through a contested strait, every gigawatt devoted to training larger AI models in the desert, extends the life of the old model at the cost of making its eventual breakdown sharper.

The war also intertwines with the spiritual and narrative aspects of collapse. Inside the US military and political class, apocalyptic and civilizational rhetoric has been steadily normalized, framing geopolitical contests as struggles for the survival of “the West” or “Judeo‑Christian civilization.” That layer of meaning offers purpose to soldiers and citizens asked to risk their lives or livelihoods in wars whose material logic is abstract, technocratic, and troubling. It recodes structural decline and geopolitical overreach as prophecy fulfilled: rising seas, economic turmoil, and global unrest become signs that the timetable is advancing as promised. In Iran, a different eschatology frames resistance to the “Great Satan” and its allies as part of a sacred history leading toward eventual redemption. Both sides, in different idioms, mobilize myths that make sacrifice and destruction endurable, even desirable, in service of a larger story. In that sense, the war is not just about pipelines and ports; it is also about whose vision of the end of the world will be allowed to define meaning as the old order frays.

Ultimately, how the US–Israeli war on Iran “plays out” is inseparable from how modern industrial civilization plays out. A likely military and political path—no decisive victory, enduring damage, intensified multipolarity, expanded security states, normalized economic shocks—maps neatly onto the picture of managed decline I have been studying. The war hastens a world where energy is more tightly securitized, trade more militarized, rights more contingent, and futures more unequal. It does not by itself bring the system down; it teaches those who rule it how to keep riding it as it sinks, shifting burdens downward and outward. In that sense, the most honest description of the war’s likely end is neither triumph nor apocalypse, but another turn of the ratchet in a civilization that is losing without admitting it. It is fighting over the control panel of a machine that is burning itself out, and arguing over whose gods and laws will bless the ride down.

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Red‑Hat Jesus at the End of the World

03 Tuesday Mar 2026

Posted by xraymike79 in Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Mental Health

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Apocalyptic Theology, Armageddon Narrative, Authoritarian Drift, Christian Nationalism, Civilizational Collapse, Digital Empire, Empire And Religion, Fossil Fuel Geopolitics, Late Stage Empire, Managed Decline, Militarized Christianity, Military Chaplaincy, Oligarchic Rule, Platform Power, Religious Nationalism, Surveillance Capitalism, Technofeudalism, Theopolitics, US Iran War, War And Myth

Christian Nationalism as the Chaplaincy of Technofeudal War

Imagine being so devoted to Jesus but somehow you end up playing the Roman soldiers who crucified him. That dark irony captures a grim symmetry of the present moment. In early 2026, as the United States and Israel expanded their war against Iran, a civil‑rights group representing service members began receiving a flood of complaints from the ranks. More than a hundred troops across dozens of units and installations reported that their commanders were telling them the Iran war was “entirely about Armageddon,” that it was “God’s plan,” and that it was meant “to bring back Jesus.”

In their accounts, briefings about logistics and rules of engagement blurred into sermons drawn from the Book of Revelation. Officers assured soldiers that the conflict was part of a divinely scripted end‑times drama, that they had been chosen to play a role in the final battle between good and evil, and that fear was unnecessary because events were “foretold.” Some commanders, according to these complaints, went further, describing President Trump as “anointed” to light the spark in Iran that would trigger Armageddon and Christ’s return.

At the same time, the Pentagon under Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced a sweeping overhaul of the military’s religious infrastructure. Hegseth promised to “make the Chaplain Corps great again,” scrap an Army spiritual‑fitness guide he derided as too secular, and “streamline” the list of officially recognized faith and belief codes—reducing more than 200 distinct categories to a smaller, more tightly curated set. The message was that chaplains should function as explicitly religious ministers serving a narrowed understanding of “acceptable” faith, not as multi‑faith counselors.

In my essay “Oil, Algorithms, and the End of Worlds: How the War on Iran Sustains a Collapsing Civilization,” I argue that the Iran war is not a tragic anomaly but a maintenance operation for a failing order. Industrial modernity has overshot the planet’s biophysical limits; elites are responding not by planning a just transition, but by building technofeudal fortresses—platform monopolies, surveillance systems, AI‑driven management—to preserve their own positions through a long decline. The war, in that frame, is about defending fossil‑fuel chokepoints and keeping the growth machine jolted alive a little longer.

The religious developments inside the military are the spiritual counterpart to that project. Christian nationalist end‑times theology offers a mythology in which endless conflict, ecological crisis, and social breakdown are not signs of a dying system but proof that God’s plan is unfolding. It is the chaplaincy of technofeudal managed decline.

Turning a War into a Prophecy

The core of the service‑member complaints is simple: commanders are explicitly telling troops that the Iran conflict is an Armageddon war, divinely ordained and necessary to bring about Christ’s return. That framing does specific political work.

It de‑politicizes the war. If the conflict is written into Scripture rather than into policy, it no longer appears as a contingent choice subject to debate, accountability, or reversal. Questions about oil routes, shipping insurance, and regional hegemony are displaced by a cosmic narrative in which the only real options are obedience or rebellion against God.

It moralizes the chain of command. Orders are no longer merely institutional; they are framed as expressions of divine will. A commander who opens a briefing by explaining that the mission is part of God’s plan positions dissent not just as insubordination but as spiritual failure. In that atmosphere, a soldier’s doubts about the justice or prudence of the war can feel, even to themselves, like a lack of faith.

It simplifies a complex geopolitical situation into a binary of the saved and the damned. The oil‑and‑algorithm machinery described in my essay—Gulf energy infrastructure, just‑in‑time tanker routes, global supply‑chain dependencies—drops out of view. In its place is a story of God’s chosen nations facing down God’s enemies. That story is emotionally potent and easy to sell in a culture already saturated with apocalyptic fiction and Christian Zionist preaching.

Finally, it absorbs anxiety about collapse into a reassuring teleology. For believers steeped in this theology, climate chaos, economic volatility, pandemics, and permanent war are no longer terrifying glitches in the system. They are evidence that the timetable is advancing as promised. The worse things get, the closer redemption feels.

For a ruling class presiding over a civilization in structural crisis, such a narrative is invaluable. It channels fear away from systemic critique and into eschatological excitement. It tells those at the sharp end of empire that the very signs of breakdown are reasons for hope.

Re‑Clericalizing the Military

The chaplain reforms push in the same direction. For years, military chaplains have existed in tension between two roles: pastors of particular traditions and quasi‑therapists serving a religiously plural, increasingly secular force. The recent shift is an explicit attempt to resolve that tension by privileging a narrower, more overtly confessional model.

When the Defense Secretary laments that an official spiritual‑fitness document mentions “God” only once but refers repeatedly to “feelings” and “playfulness,” he is not making a literary criticism. He is signaling that the institution should treat religion not as one dimension of well‑being among others, but as the primary axis of meaning and cohesion. Scrapping that document and commissioning a replacement anchored in explicitly theistic language elevates chaplains as guardians of a particular kind of faith.

Streamlining faith and belief codes serves the same goal. A coding system that recognized hundreds of beliefs—including small denominations, minority religions, and non‑belief—made room, at least on paper, for a genuinely pluralistic chaplaincy. Collapsing that list into a shorter one sweeps many of those identities off the ledger. Chaplains are nudged, by design, toward focusing on a presumed “core” faith, which in practice means conservative Christianity.

Overlay that structural change with a culture of high‑profile Bible studies and prayer breakfasts where attendance by senior officers, contractors, and political allies is treated as an informal sign of loyalty, and you get a soft but pervasive message: advancement is smoother for those who publicly align with the “right” faith. The chaplain becomes not just a spiritual caregiver but a gatekeeper of ideological conformity.

From the perspective of my technofeudal analysis, this is the spiritualization of platform governance. Just as private digital empires set the terms of access to communication, commerce, and visibility, a re‑engineered chaplaincy helps set the terms of access to belonging and advancement within the military. It polices the boundaries of acceptable belief in a way that meshes neatly with a broader project of narrowing dissent.

Technofeudalism’s Hunger for Myth

My earlier essay argues that industrial civilization is entering a phase of “managed decline.” The global economy depends on fossil‑fuel infrastructures in volatile regions, has built fragile, just‑in‑time supply chains, and is destabilizing the biosphere it rests on. In response, elites are not dismantling the machine, but retrofitting it: building digital fortresses that channel diminishing returns into private rents, using AI to automate oversight and reduce labor’s leverage, and tightening security apparatuses to handle unrest.

I describe this as technofeudalism: a regime in which the key levers of power are held by “cloud‑castles and data‑fiefs,” where corporations and states merge into mini‑polities that own not just factories and fields but the platforms through which life is coordinated. It is a system optimized not for shared flourishing but for preserving hierarchy in the face of contraction.

That system cannot run on spreadsheets alone. It needs stories.

  • It needs a story about why the energy must keep flowing through vulnerable chokepoints, even if doing so risks war.

  • It needs a story that explains why some people will be protected and others abandoned as climate shocks and resource shortages bite.

  • It needs a story that tells those tasked with enforcing the order—soldiers, police, analysts—that their work is noble even when its effects are grim.

Christian nationalist Armageddon theology offers precisely such a story. It casts oil‑defense wars as divinely mandated showdowns. It turns triage into judgment, implying that those left in sacrifice zones are outside God’s favor. It tells enforcers that their obedience is not just patriotic but salvific.

In that sense, apocalyptic rhetoric in the ranks is not a random aberration. It is the mythic layer of technofeudal governance. Where my essay traces data flows, contract structures, and energy corridors, this layer traces angels and beasts, seals and trumpets. The two maps overlay.

Privatizing the Panopticon, Sacralizing the Stack

Another through‑line in my recent essays is the blurring of public and private power. Platform corporations operate like sovereigns: they control critical infrastructure, write their own codes of conduct, maintain security arms, and sometimes defy or dictate to states. States, in turn, outsource key functions to them: surveillance, content moderation, logistics, battlefield networking.

The result is what I call the “privatization of the panopticon”—a surveillance and control apparatus that is everywhere and nowhere, formally fragmented but functionally aligned.

Religious capture of the military nests neatly inside this architecture. As the war expands, technology firms sign contracts for satellite imagery analysis, AI‑driven targeting, and cyber‑operations. Social networks become the main theaters for shaping public perception, deciding which images of burning refineries or devastated neighborhoods trend and which vanish. Defense contractors and political patrons attend faith‑infused events where spiritual and material loyalties are braided together.

In this environment, Christian nationalist language becomes part of the user interface of empire. Soldiers are not just tracked and tasked by software; they are catechized into seeing those tasks as participation in sacred history. Citizens scrolling their feeds encounter not just propaganda but prophecy, with war framed as both necessary and holy.

Technofeudalism needs people to accept being watched, sorted, and governed by opaque systems. A theology that celebrates omniscience, predestination, and obedience can be repurposed to make that feel natural. When the all‑seeing corporate‑state apparatus is implicitly mapped onto an all‑seeing deity, resistance can start to feel not just futile but blasphemous.

Triage with a Halo

A central argument of my essay is that collapse is not an on/off switch but a gradient of worsening conditions, distributed unevenly. As resources tighten and climate impacts mount, some populations are shielded and others sacrificed. Zones of abandonment—downwind communities, sacrificed rural regions, refugee camps, disenfranchised inner cities—are already visible. In a managed‑decline scenario, those zones expand.

Christian nationalist eschatology can function as a moral gloss on that expansion. If history is understood as a story about a remnant saved from a wicked world, then the existence of large populations living and dying in precarity becomes easier to rationalize. They can be seen as outside the covenant, enemies of God, or simply props in a drama whose real protagonists live elsewhere.

This is not how all Christians think, of course. Many of the troops filing complaints explicitly identify as believers horrified by what they are being told. They recognize that weaponizing their faith to celebrate war and justify devastation is a betrayal of its core. But the theology being pushed from above is not the red‑letter Jesus of the Gospels—the one who blesses peacemakers and warns the rich. It is a red‑hat Jesus tailored to the needs of a ruling class intent on holding onto its yachts and data centers for as long as possible.

When technofeudal elites choose to let some regions burn, some supply chains fail, some communities flood or starve, they are making political choices. Wrapping those choices in prophecy—insisting that they are simply signs of the end times—helps them evade both blame and reform.

Rome’s Priests, Redux

The comparison to Rome is not accidental. In the first century, imperial power and religious authority worked hand in hand. The temple and the palace may have had different façades, but they shared an interest in suppressing movements that threatened order. Jesus was executed as an insurgent against both.

Today, the robes are different, but the alignment rhymes. A modern priestly caste—chaplains constrained by policy, celebrity pastors with media platforms, institutional religious leaders with access to power—often finds itself pulled into the orbit of empire. Blessings are offered at inaugurations and weapons factories; invocations are made at rallies calling for more war; theological arguments are deployed against refugees, protesters, and whistleblowers.

The Iran war’s Armageddon talk is one more iteration of that pattern. A priestly class aligns with an imperial project to defend a crumbling order. In doing so, it risks becoming exactly what it was once taught to resist: chaplains to Caesar.

My technofeudalism essay ends with a refusal. I wrote that “technofeudalism is not destiny.” The same is true of red‑hat Jesus. Neither the economic regime nor the theology that currently lubricates it is inevitable. They are responses—choices made by frightened elites trying to ride down the curve of industrial civilization without losing their grip.

Other Stories Are Possible

If there is a way out of the trap we see before us—a way to face biophysical limits without authoritarian retrenchment, to navigate decline without mass abandonment—it will require more than policy tweaks. It will require different infrastructures, different institutions, and also different stories.

Those stories may come from secular traditions: socialism, anarchism, human rights, ecological thinking. They may also come from religious sources: liberation theologies, indigenous cosmologies, red‑letter Christianity that remembers which side of empire its founding figure died on.

What the current moment makes clear is that stories will be told. In the absence of conscious effort, the default stories will be the ones that serve the people already in charge: endless growth, necessary sacrifice zones, holy wars for oil, an algorithmic kingdom come.

The clash between technofeudalism and its alternatives will be fought with budgets and strikes and blockades, but also with sermons and memes and whispered conversations in barracks. The question is whether the faith that circulates in those spaces will continue to sanctify a gated, surveilled decline—or whether it can be turned, once again, against Rome.

Reference List

Asia Times. 2026. “US Troops Were Told Iran War Is for ‘Armageddon,’ Return of Jesus.” March 2, 2026. https://asiatimes.com/2026/03/us-troops-were-told-iran-war-is-for-armageddon-return-of-jesus/

Common Dreams. 2026. “US Commanders Want to Make War With Iran as ‘Bloody’ as Possible, Advocacy Group Warns.” March 2, 2026. https://www.commondreams.org/news/iran-armageddon-military

Esquire. 2026. “The Iran War Is God’s Plan, Say U.S. Military Leaders (Who Believe They’re Doing His Will).” March 2, 2026. https://www.esquire.com/news-politics/politics/a70590863/jesus-trump-military-iran-war/

Hegseth, Pete. 2025. “We Are Going to Make the Chaplain Corps Great Again.” Speech, Department of Defense, December 15, 2025. (Video.) https://www.facebook.com/SecWar/videos/we-are-going-to-make-the-chaplain-corps-great-again/921466543875201/

Military Religious Freedom Foundation. 2026. “MRFF Receives Over 110 Complaints about Commanders Pushing Armageddon Narrative on Iran War.” Statement, March 3, 2026. https://www.militaryreligiousfreedom.org

Military Times. 2025. “Hegseth Orders Overhaul of Chaplain Corps.” December 16, 2025. https://www.militarytimes.com/news/your-military/2025/12/17/hegseth-orders-overhaul-of-chaplain-corps/

Raw Story. 2026. “Military Group Deluged in Complaints as Armageddon Views Pushed on Troops.” March 3, 2026. https://www.rawstory.com/military-leaders-pushing-armageddon-views/

Stars and Stripes. 2025. “Hegseth to Overhaul Chaplain Corps, Toss ‘Unacceptable and Unserious’ Spiritual Fitness Guide.” December 16, 2025. https://www.stripes.com/branches/army/2025-12-17/hegseth-military-chaplains-20119952.html

U.S. Department of War. 2025. “Statement on the Department’s Strengthening of the Chaplain Corps.” Press release, December 17, 2025. https://www.justice.gov/opa/blog/statement-department-wars-strengthening-chaplain-corps

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Oil, Algorithms, and the End of Worlds: How the War on Iran Sustains a Collapsing Civilization

02 Monday Mar 2026

Posted by xraymike79 in Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Mental Health

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Armed Lifeboat Politics, Authoritarian International, Automation and Job Displacement, Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Crisis of Complexity, Digital Rentier Capitalism, Eco‑Authoritarianism, Fossil Fuel Dependency, Great Displacement, Gulf Petromonarchies, Imperial Energy Geopolitics, Iran–US–Israel conflict, Militarized Decline, Neoliberal Necropolitics, Oligarchic Power Structures, Platform Sovereignty, Surveillance Capitalism, Technofeudalism

Technofeudalism as the Regime of Managed Decline

If you listen to our ruling classes long enough, you’ll notice something odd. They talk as if the future is a brighter, more efficient version of now, with better gadgets and fewer “frictions,” yet their actual behavior looks like people quietly boarding lifeboats while assuring the passengers that the ship is unsinkable. The polite name for this is “digital transformation.” A more accurate label is something like technofeudalism, and it looks suspiciously like the political operating system of a civilization that knows, at some level, that it is winding down.

The thesis is simple. Industrial civilization is running up against its biophysical limits and its own complexity, and the people who benefit most from the current order are not preparing a just transition or a new social contract. They are building cloud‑castles and data‑fiefs on top of a crumbling base, locking in forms of extraction and control that will keep them comfortable for as long as possible while the rest of the structure buckles. Collapse, but with VIP seating.

From Capitalism to Digital Lordship, or a Very Persuasive Cosplay

Yanis Varoufakis gave the current version of this story its most popular label when he argued that capitalism has already died and been replaced by something worse, a system in which “cloudalists” like Amazon, Meta, Apple and Alphabet no longer behave like firms in competitive markets but like lords who own the terrain itself. We are not their customers so much as their tenants and serfs, forever posting, scrolling and buying on platforms whose rules can be changed overnight. The core of the argument is that these firms do not primarily profit from exploiting labor in production, in the classical capitalist sense, but from charging rent on access to digital space. They sit astride the chokepoints through which attention, communication and commerce must flow, and they tax every crossing.

It is a seductive picture, and not only because it flatters the tech barons as a new aristocracy. It also resonates with lived experience. Try to run a small business without Amazon or Google. Try to organize politically without social media, or to find work without platforms. You can do it, in theory, just as medieval peasants could in theory pick up and walk off a lord’s land. In practice, the fences are very real.

Not everyone agrees that a new mode of production has emerged. Critics of the technofeudalism thesis point out that digital platforms are still deeply embedded in capitalist relations. The surplus value that makes Silicon Valley rich still comes from factories, warehouses, data centers and code written by workers under very conventional forms of exploitation. The platforms reorganize competition and extract rents, but they have not abolished capitalism’s basic logic so much as layered a new regime of rent seeking and monopoly control on top. One recent paper sums it up rather unromantically: the “digital lords” are still capitalist titans, just with better lawyers and APIs.​

You do not have to resolve that theoretical dispute to see the political pattern. Whether you call it late capitalism with feudal tendencies, or full technofeudalism, the direction of travel is clear. Markets are being replaced not by democratic planning nor by small‑scale autarky, but by private empires whose systems decide what is visible, permissible and profitable. These are not simply companies. They are mini‑polities with their own security forces, currencies, courts of appeal and foreign policy.

The joke, if you have the stomach for it, is that this system presents itself as the peak of individual freedom. You are free to choose any platform you like, as long as it is one of the half dozen allowed by your app store. You are free to speak your mind, assuming the algorithm deigns to show your words to anyone. You are free to consent to data collection that you cannot realistically refuse. The old serf at least knew he was a serf.

Complexity, Goliath’s Curse and the Temptation of Managed Decline

At the same time as the lords are fencing off the cloud, the soil beneath the whole arrangement is turning to mud. Luke Kemp’s recent work on civilizational collapse, popularized in Goliath’s Curse, and a broader body of research on the “collapse of complex societies,” argue that industrial civilization is structurally fragile for reasons that have nothing to do with how we feel about it. Highly networked systems with tight couplings, high energy throughput and extreme inequality are prone to cascading failure. They rarely implode all at once, but they do tend to experience periods of rapid, synchronized breakdown in multiple domains.

Kemp’s reading of more than three hundred historical cases is not cheerful. Collapses typically arrive when elites push extraction too far, hollow out public goods and respond to early crises with repression instead of reform. Environmental overshoot, dwindling marginal returns on complexity, and elite overreach are preconditions. Authoritarian retrenchment is the standard late move, not the fix. Richard Heinberg phrases it more politely when he writes about “environmental‑political” collapse, but the point is the same. Our inability to stop cooking the planet is not a bug in policy. It is structurally baked into a growth‑addicted system whose leaders care more about short-term expansion than long-term survival. As warming crosses thresholds, states drift toward authoritarianism while ecosystems drift toward breakdown. The two are not separate stories. They are the same story playing out in different theaters.

Technofeudalism fits snugly into this picture as an elite strategy for managing, or at least surviving, decline. If you know the growth engine is sputtering and the climate is destabilizing, you have two broad options. You can attempt a painful structural transition that will likely reduce your own wealth and power. Or you can build gated networks, both physical and digital, that will keep you and your class insulated from the worst consequences for as long as possible. The emerging order looks very much like the second choice.

From this angle, platform monopolies and cloud empires are not forward‑looking innovations so much as late‑imperial fortifications. They channel shrinking streams of profit into private channels, automate away bothersome labor, and erect terms of service around social life that can be tightened as conditions worsen. Energy constraints, supply chain chaos and climate disruptions can all be partially offset for those at the top by prioritizing their access through proprietary systems. Everyone else gets app notifications.

You do not have to take collapse theorists’ word for it; you can watch the logic in action in the way our rulers are handling the latest Middle East war.

War as Platform Maintenance

If you wanted to design a crisis perfectly calibrated to reveal the nervous system of industrial civilization, you could do worse than the current US–Israel war on Iran. It has everything a late‑imperial scriptwriter could ask for: decades of sanctions and shadow conflict, an aging hegemon with an addiction to oil and supremacy, a regional rival that refuses to accept its assigned place in the hierarchy, and an energy system that can be knocked sideways by a few well‑aimed drones. The fact that this is being sold as a war for “freedom” and “stability” is almost touching. What it is really about is keeping the existing platform running long enough for the people at the top to cash out.

The basic sequence is straightforward. In late February 2026, after years of covert attacks and proxy clashes, the United States and Israel launched large‑scale strikes on Iranian territory. Cruise missiles and stealth aircraft hit air defenses, Revolutionary Guard facilities and nuclear sites. Senior commanders were killed. Tehran responded with waves of ballistic missiles and drones aimed at US bases in the Gulf and at critical energy infrastructure, forcing some facilities to shut down and sending oil prices sharply higher. Shipping insurance spiked. Airlines rerouted or cancelled flights. Kuwait, in the fog of war, even managed to shoot down US jets it thought were Iranian. The conflict quickly spread to Lebanon and threatened to pull in other actors.

If you see this purely as a morality play about good states versus bad states, the story stops there. If you look at it through the lens of a system already straining under climate disruption, energy limits and political decay, the picture is less heroic. For years, collapse researchers have pointed out that a global economy built on a handful of fossil‑fuel chokepoints in politically volatile regions is not exactly a model of resilience. The Strait of Hormuz, the Gulf refineries, the pipeline web lacing the region together, the just‑in‑time tankers and jet fuel routes: all of this is a single, interdependent machine. It is also the machine that keeps global shipping, industrial agriculture and air travel running. When you toss cruise missiles into that system, you are not just punishing a regime. You are stress‑testing the life support for industrial modernity.

The rhetoric in Washington and Tel Aviv, however, is not “we are dangerously addicted to this machine and should probably do something about that before the next crisis.” It is “we will not tolerate threats to freedom of navigation” and “we must prevent Iran from dominating the region.” Translation: the platform must be defended at all costs, and any actor that tries to alter its terms of use will be treated as malware. So long as tankers keep moving and energy companies can hedge their risk, temporary spikes and turbulence are acceptable collateral damage. The cost is paid by everyone who lives downstream of those price shocks and disruptions, but that has never been a disqualifying consideration.

Meanwhile, the war offers a gift basket of opportunities to the digital and security oligopolies that already define technofeudal life. Big tech firms sign fresh contracts to provide satellite imagery analysis, AI‑driven targeting, cyber defense and battlefield networking. Data brokers and surveillance vendors pitch their tools as indispensable for tracking Iranian assets and domestic critics. Social media platforms are suddenly the main arenas for narrative control, deciding whose videos from Bushehr or Ras Tanura trend and whose vanish into moderation queues. The same companies that insist they are mere neutral conduits of communication become, once again, gatekeepers for what counts as reality. Fear and outrage are among the platform’s most dependable revenue streams.

On the home front, the war works the old familiar magic. A president who ran on grievance now has an open‑ended external enemy. The domestic opposition, if it criticizes too loudly, can be painted as unpatriotic or even sympathetic to Tehran. Calls to rein in surveillance, border militarization or police violence can be dismissed as irresponsible when “our boys are under fire.” Budget fights that might have trimmed the sails of the security state get reframed as softness on Iran. The permanent emergency that keeps the carceral and surveillance apparatus fat and happy gets a new lease on life. In that sense, the Iran war is not a departure from technofeudal normality. It is normality stripped of its decorous language.

Seen from above, then, this is less a clash of civilizations than a piece of platform maintenance. A semi‑peripheral state that tried to assert some degree of autonomy in energy policy and regional security is being hammered into compliance. The fossil‑digital assemblage that keeps the current order afloat takes a hit, adjusts, and carries on without ever questioning its own architecture. The digital lords and their political partners farm the fear for contracts and clicks. And the underlying problem, that an energy‑hungry, growth‑addicted civilization is burning through its future, is once again displaced onto a new villain with a new flag. The world is not on fire because this or that regime is evil. It is on fire because the system itself cannot imagine a future in which it is not the center. War is how it buys itself more time, even as time runs out.

Digital Rents in a World with Less to Rent

The paradox of technofeudalism is that it promises infinite digital abundance on top of increasingly constrained physical baselines. You can stream as much content as you like, but you cannot stream fresh water into a dried‑out river. You can mint as many tokens as you like, but you cannot mint topsoil.

Analysts of planetary limits have been pointing out for years that modernity as we know it, with high material throughput and continuous compound growth, is incompatible with a finite planet. A 2021 paper put it bluntly in its title: modernity is incompatible with planetary limits. The authors argued that any version of “business as usual,” however greenwashed, relies on levels of energy and resource use that cannot be sustained without severe ecological damage. They suggested that a different model, one that deliberately scales down throughput and reorients economies toward sufficiency, is required if we want to avoid hard collapse.​

Technofeudalism is, among other things, the refusal of that conclusion. Instead of reorganizing production and consumption, it reorganizes access and control. Big Tech’s move into energy, logistics, health and finance is often marketed as efficiency, but it has another effect. It allows a small number of corporations to decide who gets to optimize what, under what conditions, and who gets cut off when systems are stressed.

If you are a hospital and your records system is locked into a proprietary cloud, your ability to function in a crisis depends partly on a distant company’s priorities. If you are a city whose traffic lights, water systems and communications infrastructure are owned or run by external platforms, any conflict between public need and corporate strategy will be resolved where it always is: on the boardroom side. As one recent article on “techno‑feudalism and the new global power struggle” put it, control over digital infrastructure and data now confers a kind of private sovereignty that can rival or undermine states. The digital lords do not just sell services. They write rules. In a context of civilizational strain, that is not a neutral fact. It determines who will be left holding the bag when things begin to fail.

At this point, the only thing missing from the picture is a way to make most people economically redundant while keeping their dependence intact, and that is where AI and automation stroll on stage.

Automation as Elite Life Raft

AI is being sold as a tide that will lift all boats, but in practice it looks more like a pump that quietly drains the water out from under everyone except the people who own the dock. Analyses of the “great displacement” already point to sharp job losses or hiring freezes in AI‑exposed roles, especially for younger and mid‑skill workers, creating what one recent essay calls a looming “junior crisis” where the first rungs of the career ladder are sawed off while the C‑suite installs more glass. Economic modeling goes further, sketching a future in which AI eliminates so much paid work that mass consumer demand shrinks, and only a thin oligarchy of infrastructure and IP owners retain real power, perhaps stabilizing the rest of us with just enough universal basic pocket money to keep the lights on and the platforms busy. AI policy researchers have warned that “artificial intelligence power” is already being used as a pretext to strip‑mine public institutions, privatize data, and redesign work so that human judgment is degraded and surveillance is intensified. None of this gives ordinary people any meaningful control over the systems that are replacing them. In collapse terms, this is not an accident; it is the point. If you expect a harsher, more brittle world, one way to protect your class is to automate away as much labor as possible, reduce the political leverage of workers, and concentrate control in a tiny group that owns the machines, the code, and the networks. AI becomes the tool that turns surplus populations into politically harmless background noise and turns tech oligarchs into the de facto nobility of a shrinking world.

The Authoritarian International as Crisis Management Committee

One of the more depressing spectacles of the past decade has been watching the convergence of tech barons, fossil fuel interests, nationalist politicians and security apparatuses into a loose, self‑protective network. Call it an authoritarian international if you like, or simply a very exclusive trade association.

Analysts of global power have noted that as digital platforms grew, they began to reshape international relations as well. A recent paper on technofeudalism and the “new global power struggle” describes a nascent digital cold war in which corporations are key actors alongside states, controlling infrastructure, data and AI capabilities that have strategic significance. These firms are not neutral. They cooperate with some governments, resist others, and occasionally behave as if they are sovereign entities in their own right.

Meanwhile, collapse research points out that in prior civilizations, elites often responded to emerging stresses by doubling down on extraction and repression rather than sharing power or resources. It worked, for a while. Then it didn’t. Our elites are repeating the pattern, but with better gadgets. Surveillance systems that would have made twentieth century dictators swoon are now quietly integrated into smartphones, city cameras and data brokers’ servers. AI tools can filter, flag and predict dissent. Autonomous systems are being developed for border control and policing. The apparatus of a digital autocracy is being built in peacetime, under the logo of consumer convenience.

In this environment, the distinction between “public” and “private” repression becomes fuzzy. When a government leans on a platform to mute certain narratives, or when platforms preemptively tweak their recommendations to avoid regulatory heat, control is exercised through a partnership. When a security service wants access to communications or location data, it often does not need to build its own system. It can politely tap into existing ones. Technofeudalism is, among other things, the privatization of the panopticon.

This is where the sardonic part writes itself. The same people who rail against “big government” are delighted to hand coercive functions to unaccountable corporations, then quietly fuse those corporate tools back into the state when it suits them. Instead of “everything within the state,” the real slogan now is “everything within the tech stack” – as long as it runs on their platforms, it’s under their control.

Adaptation for Whom?

If decline and fragmentation are indeed on the menu, the hard question is no longer simply whether “humanity” survives in some abstract genetic sense. On a planet that has burned through its easiest fossil fuels, destabilized its own climate system, shredded biodiversity and poisoned much of its soil and water, survival is not a binary outcome but a spectrum of increasingly harsh possibilities. A small, scattered population of Homo sapiens could limp on in damaged niches for a very long time, but what we usually mean by survival is something closer to “billions of people living decently in functioning societies.” It is that version of “technological humanity,” built on high‑energy systems, global supply chains and dense institutions, that now looks fundamentally incompatible with the biophysical reality we have created.

Technofeudalism offers one grim answer to the question of who gets to live well on a depleted planet. It imagines that high‑tech life will continue for those who can pay for priority access to shrinking stocks of energy, food, habitable land, data and security, and that everyone else will slide down a ladder of regression calibrated to how useless they are to the owners of the system. Some will be kept on as precarious gig and cloud‑serf labor, still tethered to the digital grid through low‑bandwidth pipes, algorithmic management and credit scores. Others will be quietly discarded into zones of abandonment where the old promises of development, citizenship and rights no longer apply, and where climate shocks, disease and scarcity are allowed to do slow, deniable work.

This is not speculative in the comfortable science‑fiction sense. Proto‑zones of abandonment are already visible in sacrificed rural regions, in inner cities stripped of services, in communities living downwind of refineries and mines, in refugee camps and informal settlements that exist just outside the polite perimeter of “global integration.” As resource depletion, climate disasters, crop failures and supply‑chain breakdowns intensify, the temptation for the lords of the cloud and their political allies will not be to shrink these spaces but to expand them. When there is physically not enough energy, food or safe territory to support everybody at current levels, triage is not a moral thought experiment. It is logistics. The only real question is who gets to write the triage protocol and how honestly they name what they are doing.

Collapse theory has a dark sense of humor about all this. Its more sardonic voices like to point out that every ruling class in history thought its particular arrangements were the culmination of rational progress, right up until the moment they were not. The Roman aristocracy did not plan for a world in which their villas were ruins picked over by peasants. The coal barons of the nineteenth century did not imagine a world where burning their product would destabilize the jet stream. The technofeudal elite does not plan seriously for a world without high bandwidth, cheap chips, predictable seasons and functioning grids, even though those things rest on ecological and material conditions that are now visibly eroding. They are very good at modeling other people’s risk and very bad at relinquishing the power and wealth that would have to be given up to reduce it. That, more than any abstract limit, is what makes the future feel narrow.

Other Endings Are Available, At Least in Theory

If this all sounds like a counsel of despair, it is worth recalling that collapse is not necessarily uniform, nor is it ethically neutral. The fact that complex systems simplify does not tell you who gets crushed and who lands lightly. Richard Heinberg, in his discussion of intertwined environmental and political breakdown, insists that there are still meaningful choices to be made. We can, he suggests, shift our focus from “sustainability” as a euphemism for maintaining business as usual, and start talking honestly about survival, resilience and regeneration. That means building local capacities, strengthening mutual aid, reducing dependence on brittle long chains and fighting like hell against authoritarian shortcuts.

Technofeudalism is not destiny. It is a particular way a frightened elite is trying to ride the down‑slope of industrial civilization without losing its privileges. It depends on our acquiescence, our willingness to live as tenants on platforms and to accept the story that there is no alternative. There is no law of physics that says digital infrastructures must be privately owned or that data must flow upward and never sideways. There is no thermodynamic principle that requires AI to be pointed at ad targeting and automated repression instead of at, say, optimizing food systems for equity.

The deeper problem, of course, is that the reforms required to avoid the worst outcomes would feel, to people at the top, less like reform and more like regime change. You do not transition smoothly from cloud castles back to a society of modest, widely shared comforts without someone losing a yacht or three. The same is true of the energy and material side. Staying within planetary limits means rich societies using less, not just using differently. That is heresy in both boardroom and cabinet.

So we have arrived at a kind of late‑civilizational farce. The official narrative says that more innovation and more efficiency will keep the party going. The actual system is retooling itself into a gated, surveilled, stratified order that can wobble through a long decline while preserving the status of those who built it: oil still flowing, algorithms still sorting, worlds quietly ending offstage. Call it technofeudalism, call it a fascist operating system running on capitalist hardware. Either way, it is our current answer to the question of how to face collapse without admitting that collapse is what we are facing.

Whether we can still write a different answer is the only interesting political question left.


References

“AI, Job Displacement and the Case for a New Social Contract.” Baker Tilly Global, February 10, 2026. https://www.bakertilly.global/insights/ai-job-displacement-and-the-case-for-a-new-social-contract

AI Now Institute. “Executive Summary – Artificial Power: 2025 Landscape Report.” June 03, 2025. https://ainowinstitute.org/publications/research/executive-summary-artificial-power.

“AI‑Driven Collapse 2026–2100: The End of Normal Work, the Rise of AI Oligarchs, and How Entrepreneurial Families Can Survive.” MECI Group, February 26, 2026. https://meci-group.com/ai-driven-collapse-2026-2100-the-end-of-normal-work-the-rise-of-ai-oligarchs-and-how-entrepreneurial-families-can-still-win/

AP News. “War Between Iran and Israel and the US Widens.” March 2, 2026. https://apnews.com/article/iran-israel-us-03-02-2026-cb42936de1d8c261be8f30f11c6665fa.

Atlantic Council. “Experts React: How the US War with Iran Is Playing Out around the Middle East.” February 28, 2026. https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/dispatches/experts-react-how-the-us-war-with-iran-is-playing-out-around-the-middle-east/.

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CNN. “Live Updates: Trump Warns Iran about Larger Strikes as War Spirals in Middle East.” March 2, 2026. https://www.cnn.com/world/live-news/iran-israel-us-attack-03-02-26-intl-hnk.

“Digital Lords or Capitalist Titans? Critiquing the Techno-Feudalism Narrative.” Developing Economics, May 5, 2025. https://developingeconomics.org/2025/05/05/digital-lords-or-capitalist-titans-critiquing-the-techno-feudalism-narrative/.

Heinberg, Richard. “Environmental-Political Collapse Accelerates.” Polycrisis.org, December 13, 2024. https://polycrisis.org/resource/environmental-political-collapse-accelerates/.

Inside Climate News. “With the World Stumbling Past 1.5 Degrees of Warming, Scientists Warn of Unrest and Authoritarian Backlash.” February 5, 2024. https://insideclimatenews.org/news/28012024/with-world-warming-scientists-warn-of-unrest-and-authoritarian-backlash/.

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IZA Institute of Labor Economics. “Artificial Intelligence, the Collapse of Consumer Society, and Oligarchy.” Discussion Paper, December 31, 2024. https://www.iza.org/publications/dp/17682/artificial-intelligence-the-collapse-of-consumer-society-and-oligarchy

Kemp, Luke. Goliath’s Curse: The History and Future of Societal Collapse. Reviewed in The New York Times, October 2, 2025. https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/02/books/review/luke-kemp-goliaths-curse.html.

LessWrong. “[Link] The Collapse of Complex Societies.” December 30, 2012. https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/cfiJLA7aGhMWqMe7i/link-the-collapse-of-complex-societies.

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PBS NewsHour. “Live Updates: U.S.–Israel Conflict with Iran Widens.” March 2, 2026. https://www.pbs.org/newshour/world/live-updates-u-s-israel-conflict-with-iran-widens.

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“The End of the World as We Know It? Theorist Warns Humanity Is Headed Toward Civilizational Breakdown.” The Independent, January 13, 2025. https://www.the-independent.com/news/science/world-end-apocalypse-human-civilization-collapse-b2678651.html.

“The New Yorker. ‘Has Capitalism Been Replaced by “Technofeudalism”?’” March 25, 2024. https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2024/04/01/has-capitalism-been-replaced-by-technofeudalism.

TRT World Research Centre. “Weaponising ‘Freedom’: Regime Change Narratives in the 2026 Iran War.” February 27, 2026. https://researchcentre.trtworld.com/publications/analysis/weaponising-freedom-regime-change-narratives-in-the-2026-iran-war/.

Varoufakis, Yanis. Technofeudalism: What Killed Capitalism. Profile Books, 2023.

Varoufakis, Yanis. “Two Reviews of Technofeudalism by Conservative Publications.” April 1, 2024. https://www.yanisvaroufakis.eu/2024/04/01/two-reviews-of-technofeudalism-by-conservative-publications-free-beacon-the-european-conservative/.

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The Coin In The Sky: Notes On The American Empire

01 Sunday Mar 2026

Posted by xraymike79 in Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Mental Health

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

American Empire, Climate Catastrophe, Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Corporate Fascism, Cultural Imperialism, Democratic Erosion, Economic Inequality, Environmental Externalities, Global Supply Chains, Imperial Decline, Late Capitalism, Mass Consumerism, Media Saturation, Military Industrial Complex, Moral Bankruptcy, Neoliberal Globalization, Oligarchic Democracy, Soft Power Hegemony, Spectacle And Propaganda, Spiritual Alienation

America’s greatest export has never been freedom, nor democracy, nor even the vague, sugary, carbonated myth called “hope.” It has been the combo meal: a steaming, shrink‑wrapped bundle of war, debt, spectacle, and distraction. The empire’s genius has been to make that bundle look like salvation and then convince the rest of the planet to pay for the privilege of drowning in it.

The Coin in the Sky

Imagine the American century as a single image: a weathered coin the size of a god’s head hovering over a smog‑black city, its portrait worn smooth by the greasy fingers of markets and wars. The face is technically a “Founding Father,” but at this point it could be anyone: a senator from Delaware, a Silicon Valley disruptor, a defense‑industry lobbyist—all interchangeable silhouettes in the great engraving of capital. The inscription reads “In Markets We Trust,” and below that, in smaller print, “Some Restrictions Apply.”

This is not a republic so much as a vending machine guarded by aircraft carriers. Put your ballot in the slot, listen to the rattling of Super PAC coins down the steel chute, and out pops another custodian of the sacred GDP. Americans were told this machine was the final form of history, a device so perfect that even criticizing it sounds like heresy or—worse—“class warfare.”

The War Machine as Jobs Program and Secular Church

President Eisenhower, who actually knew something about war beyond the PowerPoint slides, warned of a “military‑industrial complex” whose “unwarranted influence” would endanger democracy and drain the wealth and spirit of the nation. He might as well have been lecturing a casino about the dangers of slot machines. The United States listened respectfully, named a few highways after him, and then proceeded to build a planetary war machine so large that it now functions as the default industrial policy, employment scheme, tech incubator, and foreign‑policy side hustle rolled into one.

The Pentagon is not just a building; it is the closest thing America has to a national church. It absorbs tithes in the form of tax dollars, offers sacraments in the form of new fighter jets, and dispenses salvation as “security” against a rotating cast of demons: communists, terrorists, rogue states, great‑power rivals. At every budget cycle, lobbyists, retired generals, and contractors gather in Washington’s inner sanctums to chant the liturgy of “readiness” and “jobs,” their PowerPoints studded with maps of danger that miraculously correspond to congressional districts in need of employment.

This is war as Keynesian stimulus, but with worse infrastructure and better branding. Missile systems that do not work are funded because they create jobs that do not pay enough, in towns that have no other reason to exist except to build the hardware that will someday turn someone else’s town into rubble. Every gun, as Eisenhower put it, “signifies, in the final sense, a theft” from the hungry; it is also a cleverly disguised transfer of wealth from public need to the corporate balance sheet.

Meanwhile, the empire’s forward operating bases form a steel necklace around the planet: hundreds of installations from Germany to Guam, Diego Garcia to Djibouti, a cartography of “interests” so sprawling that everything, everywhere has become a potential battlefield. The empire calls this “deterrence”; others might recognize it as what Chalmers Johnson described as “blowback on layaway”—installments of resentment accruing interest in distant deserts and megacities.

Oligarchy in a Democracy Costume

Officially, this is all done by a government “of the people, by the people, for the people.” In practice, it increasingly resembles a corporate boardroom with a flag at the front. Wealth concentration in the United States has reached levels rivaled only by late‑tsarist Russia: the richest 130,000 families own nearly as much as the bottom 90 percent; three individuals possess as much as the bottom half of the population. Political scientists Martin Gilens and Benjamin Page went looking for democracy in this landscape and found that the policy preferences of the average citizen have “near‑zero and statistically non‑significant” impact on what the government actually does.​

This is not a glitch; it is a design feature. Campaigns are financed by those who benefit from the military‑industrial complex, deregulated finance, and globalized supply chains, so policy obligingly reflects their desires: low taxes on capital, endless war contracts, minimal labor protections, maximum latitude for monopolies and mergers. The Supreme Court helpfully declared that money is speech, which means some citizens now own megaphones the size of small galaxies while others are reduced to mouthing opinions in a dark utility closet.

When inequality becomes this grotesque, the old myths of equal opportunity and meritocracy strain to the breaking point. At that point, ruling elites have a choice: share power and wealth, or double down on control. The American oligarchy has chosen the second path, lubricated with the language of culture war and the politics of resentment.

Thus, demagogues are elevated to rant on screens about immigrants, “wokeness,” and the gender of cartoon characters while the donors quietly finalize the next tax cut and defense appropriation. Fascistic aesthetics—chants, flags, paramilitary cosplay—bubble up around a politics whose real content is astonishingly banal: lower corporate taxes, weaker unions, more fossil fuels, more weapons sales. The spectacle is the camouflage.

Consumerism: Bread and Endless Circuses

What keeps this whole contraption from collapsing under the weight of its own absurdity is not faith in democracy, but faith in shopping. American consumerism is less an economic pattern than a civilizational mood: an anxious, neon hunger that confuses accumulation with meaning. Status is measured not by civic virtue or wisdom, but by square footage, brand logos, and the price tags of things bought to impress people one secretly despises.

The postwar boom turned consumption into national duty: to purchase was to support growth, to support growth was to defeat communism, to defeat communism was to vindicate the American Way. Malls replaced town squares; advertising replaced public discourse; citizens were redefined as consumers whose primary political act happens at a checkout counter or, later, in an online cart.

The psychological engine of this system is insecurity. As analysts of American consumer culture note, people in the “sole superpower” are haunted by the fear of falling behind, not having enough, not being enough. The solution is always more: more clothes, more gadgets, more experiences, more “content.” Overconsumption becomes both symptom and cure, a treadmill powered by anxiety and lubricated with credit.

And because America seldom keeps its pathologies to itself, this way of life is exported everywhere. Malls rise in former colonies, stocked with the same Western brands; streaming platforms beam the same narratives of glamorous excess into slums and villages; fast‑food chains become more recognizable than local governments. Consumerism becomes a lingua franca of aspiration, teaching billions that happiness lives somewhere between the unboxing video and the landfill.

The Empire as Global Influencer

If Rome exported law and roads, America exports lifestyle and logistics. Its mass culture—Hollywood, pop music, video games—has become the ambient soundtrack of global modernity. On the surface, this looks like soft power, a benign diffusion of creativity and fun. Yet beneath the surface, it carries a deeper message: that life is properly organized around brands, flickering screens, and perpetual novelty; that identity is something purchased and assembled from corporate offerings; that freedom means the absence of limits, especially ecological ones.

Globalization, we are told, is an inevitable tide, but the currents run in a very specific direction. Supply chains move raw materials and cheap labor from South to North; cultural chains move desires from North to South. Both are anchored by the dollar, the global reserve currency backed, not coincidentally, by the same navy that patrols the shipping lanes. The smiling corporate mascot and the menacing aircraft carrier are two faces of the same coin.

Those who resist this order are sanctioned, bombed, or lectured about human rights, sometimes all three. Their crime is not tyranny—plenty of compliant tyrannies are tolerated—but disobedience to the empire’s preferred blend of open markets and closed political horizons. Freedom, in this lexicon, means the freedom of capital to move, not the freedom of people to shape their own economies.

Environmental Apocalypse as Externality

Industrial civilization now resembles a horizon of smokestacks vomiting clouds into a sky already crowded with explosions and missiles. It is tempting to see this simply as metaphor, but it is also reportage. The American way of life—vast suburban sprawl, car dependence, hyperconsumption—has been one of the great engines of planetary destabilization. The United States has historically contributed a disproportionate share of greenhouse‑gas emissions while preaching “growth” as universal destiny.

The same corporate and political interests that feed at the trough of the military‑industrial complex also bankroll the fossil‑fuel complex, lobbying to delay climate action, sow doubt about science, and frame any serious response as an assault on jobs and freedom. Climate catastrophe is treated as a public‑relations problem to be managed with greenwashed branding and carbon‑offset schemes, while the empire quietly prepares for the security implications: more border fortifications, more resource wars, more internal repression when disaster hits home.

In this sense, the apocalypse is not a sudden event; it is a business model. Droughts, floods, and fires create new markets—for private security, disaster reconstruction, geoengineering—as the same system that caused the crisis offers to sell us survival at a premium.

The Spiritual Vacancy at the Heart of the Mall

Underneath the noise of jets and advertisements lies a quieter crisis: the erosion of meaning. A society that defines human beings primarily as workers and consumers cannot help but generate a kind of spiritual malnutrition. The old languages of solidarity, sacrifice, and the common good sound archaic against the algorithmic imperative to maximize engagement and shareholder value.

People reach for religion, nationalism, conspiracy theories—anything that promises a story larger than their credit score. The oligarchy is happy to indulge these cravings so long as they do not threaten the flow of profits. Thus, we get a peculiar arrangement: a culture saturated with apocalyptic fantasies—zombie plagues, superhero battles, end‑of‑the‑world blockbusters—while the actual slow apocalypse of climate breakdown and democratic decay unfolds in the background like a discarded studio backdrop.

In this theater, satire becomes almost redundant. How do you parody a system in which billionaires literally fly into space on rockets shaped like phallic jokes while their workers urinate in bottles to meet productivity targets? Where is the exaggeration in pointing out that the same government that claims it cannot afford universal healthcare somehow finds endless trillions for wars whose objectives even the generals cannot articulate?

Exporting the Void

The tragic part is not merely that America built this edifice for itself; it is that it sold it to the world as aspiration. Nations once dreaming of liberation now dream of shopping malls; revolutions once fought in the name of land and bread are rebranded as opportunities for foreign investment. Local cultures are mined for “content,” repackaged, and sold back to their originators with a subscription fee.

The American empire does not need to colonize territory in the old way; it colonizes imagination. When every child on earth grows up wanting the same shoes, the same franchise movies, the same miracle diet of sugar and spectacle, the empire has achieved something unmatched in history: a near‑total synchronization of desire to the rhythms of its own profit cycles.

But synchronization is not the same as satisfaction. The more the empire spreads its gospel of individualism and accumulation, the more it quietly generates loneliness, anxiety, and ecological ruin. Disillusioned citizens in the core and the periphery alike find themselves trapped between authoritarian nostalgia and algorithmic nihilism, with little sense of how to build an alternative.

Toward an Honest Reckoning

None of this is destiny. Empires fall; systems change; values shift. The omnipotence of American capitalism and militarism is as contingent as the British Raj or the Roman legions once seemed. Yet an honest reckoning would require something the empire currently lacks: a capacity for self‑limitation, a willingness to redirect resources from weapons to welfare, from profit to planetary survival, from mindless consumption to collective flourishing.

Such a shift would mean breaking the power of oligarchs who have no interest in transformation; rebuilding public institutions capable of serving majorities rather than donors; and cultivating a culture that measures success not by the size of one’s arsenal or one’s shopping cart but by the health of communities and ecosystems. It would mean treating the rest of the world not as a market or battlefield but as a community of equals, each with the right to define prosperity on their own terms.

For now, the coin in the sky still glows, backlit by burning forests and devastated cities, its surface smudged with the fingerprints of corporations and generals. Down below, beneath the billboards and drone trails, people continue to live, love, and resist in ways that rarely trend but quietly persist. The American empire is powerful, but it is not immortal, and its collapse—whether gradual or sudden—will open space for other stories to breathe and be told.

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The Authoritarian International: How the Real “Deep State” Went Global

28 Saturday Feb 2026

Posted by xraymike79 in Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Mental Health

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AI Militarization, Authoritarian International, Corporate State Fusion, Deep State Politics, Democratic Backsliding, Digital Repression, Elite Impunity, Epstein Files, Fascist Tendencies, Global Police State, Neoliberal Globalization, Oligarchic Power Structures, Organized Crime Nexus, Platform Sovereignty, Political Economy Of Control, Security State Apparatus, State Capture, Surveillance Capitalism, Techno-Feudalism, Transnational Elites

How oligarchs, security services, and tech platforms quietly fused into a transnational regime of control

For years, “deep state” sounded like the fever dream of message‑board conspiracists, a catch‑all phrase for everything people sensed but could not name. The irony is that while they ranted about secret cabals of civil‑service liberals and shadowy bureaucrats, a very different kind of deep state was hardening in plain sight. It did not look like a cabal of socialist planners tucked away in government basements. It looked like lawyers, private‑equity partners, intelligence veterans, tech founders, arms dealers, royal families, and security chiefs quietly learning to treat whole countries the way corporations treat “emerging markets”: as assets to be monetized, populations to be managed, and threats to be neutralized or bought off.

This is the authoritarian international: a loose, evolving network of oligarchs, political operatives, security services, and organized criminals who cooperate across borders to turn state power itself into a profit center while shielding one another from scrutiny. It is not a single organization with a membership card. It is a set of habits and incentives that, over the past few decades, have turned the old idea of sovereignty inside out.

The old deep state was a national creature. The new one is transnational, plugged into fiber‑optic cables and tax havens, happy to swap techniques between dictatorships, “flawed democracies,” and outright mafia states. If you zoom in on any one node—Moscow, Riyadh, Washington, London, Shanghai—you see local histories and rivalries. Zoom out, and a pattern appears: concentrated economic power, fused with surveillance technologies and security institutions, hardening into a planetary architecture of control.

The depressing part is that this did not come out of nowhere. The seed was planted decades ago, in the overlapping stories of neoliberal globalization, post‑Cold War triumphalism, and what Shoshana Zuboff has called “surveillance capitalism.” The hopeful part, thin as it is, is that once you see the wiring, you can at least stop mistaking it for the weather.


From Neoliberal Globalization to Techno‑Authoritarianism

The authoritarian international did not spring fully formed from the head of Vladimir Putin or Xi Jinping. It grew out of a set of choices made in supposedly triumphant liberal democracies after the Cold War: deregulate finance, privatize public assets, offshore industry, and treat markets as the main mechanism for solving political problems. In that world, corporations and investors gained freedom of movement that ordinary citizens never did. Money could cross borders in milliseconds, while people drowned in the Mediterranean.

Yanis Varoufakis and others have described this as a shift from “democratic capitalism” to something closer to techno‑feudalism: a landscape where giant platforms, energy companies, and financial institutions resemble private fiefdoms extracting rent, rather than firms competing in level markets. States still exist, but they increasingly act like property managers for global capital. They enforce the rules on workers, debtors, tenants, and dissidents, while remaining strangely helpless when confronted with a too‑big‑to‑fail bank or platform.

At the same time, the hard apparatus of surveillance and security deepened. The expansion of the U.S. national security state after September 11, the global intelligence‑sharing frameworks pioneered by the Five Eyes, and the quiet proliferation of “lawful intercept” tools gave both democratic and authoritarian governments unprecedented visibility into communication and movement. Edward Snowden’s disclosures made a tiny corner of that architecture visible to the public, but the story was larger than any one program. Governments learned that they could monitor entire populations with the help of telecoms and tech firms; tech firms learned that the data they collected for advertising were also valuable to intelligence and law enforcement.

Then came the platforms. Facebook, Google, Amazon, Tencent, Alibaba, and their cousins learned to harvest behavioral data at scale, profile users, and subtly steer attention and emotion. This was not initially sold as a tool of control; it was sold as relevance, personalization, and growth. But the same instruments that could optimize click‑through rates could also optimize political messaging, nudge voter turnout, and detect emerging social movements in real time.

What emerged from this stew of privatization, surveillance, and data extraction was not quite the liberal fantasy of “global governance” but something colder: a system where economic and security interests could find one another across borders, trade favors, and quietly rewrite the rules.


Oligarchs, Security Services, and Organized Crime

If you want to see the authoritarian international in miniature, you could do worse than study Russia after the collapse of the Soviet Union. The 1990s “shock therapy” privatizations created a generation of oligarchs who acquired vast state assets at fire‑sale prices. Many of them had direct ties to the old security services or were quickly brought to heel by them. Under Putin, the fusion of the FSB (successor to the KGB), state bureaucracy, and select oligarchs produced a system where wealth and political loyalty were two sides of the same coin. The line between mafia, state, and business blurred.

But it would be a mistake to treat this as an exclusively Russian pathology. Post‑Soviet oligarchs laundered money through Western banks, bought London real estate, hired American and European lawyers, and parked their yachts under flags of convenience. Western financial centers eagerly acted as enablers and beneficiaries. The City of London, New York, and various offshore jurisdictions became laundromats for loot from Russia, Nigeria, Saudi Arabia, China, and beyond. The “rules‑based order” had a side hustle: sheltering stolen wealth.

In country after country, similar patterns emerged. In Ukraine, before and after the Maidan, oligarchic clans wielded media, private security, and political parties as tools of self‑protection. In many Middle Eastern states, royal families and intelligence chiefs controlled sovereign wealth funds, arms deals, and giant infrastructure projects, often in close cooperation with Western defense contractors and banks. In Latin America, from Mexico to Brazil, cartels and organized crime groups wove themselves into local police forces, judiciaries, and political parties.

Call it the criminalization of the state, or the statization of crime. Either way, the direction of travel was clear: the same networks that trafficked drugs, weapons, and people also trafficked influence, contracts, and votes. “Anti‑corruption” campaigns became tools for one faction of the elite to discipline another, rather than genuine efforts to clean house.

The authoritarian international thrives in these spaces where legality, illegality, and quasi‑legality mingle. A private military contractor hired to “secure” a mine in Africa, a lobbyist arranging a meeting between a Gulf sovereign wealth fund and a Silicon Valley unicorn, a shell company routing payments through the Caribbean: all of these are part of the same ecosystem.


The Epstein Cabal as a Microcosm

If you want to see the authoritarian international in its most grotesque, intimate form, you end up back in Jeffrey Epstein’s living rooms and on his planes. The newly released Epstein files do not just document the crimes of one prolific predator; they sketch the outlines of a social world where heads of state, princes, billionaires, academics, diplomats, media figures, and fixers moved easily in and out of the orbit of a man already convicted of trafficking children. It is less a “conspiracy” in the cinematic sense than a portrait of how a certain layer of the global elite actually lives: shielded, networked, and sure that rules are for other people.

The documents and investigative reporting make three things brutally clear. First, Epstein functioned as a broker and facilitator inside an overlapping cluster of political, financial, and cultural elites that spanned the US, UK, Europe, the Gulf monarchies, Israel, and beyond. He moved money, introduced powerful people to one another, brokered deals, massaged reputations, and traded in access and information, even after his 2008 conviction. Second, sexual exploitation of minors was not an unfortunate side‑hustle; it was woven into the fabric of his operations, a form of entertainment, leverage, and bonding for people who imagined themselves unaccountable. Third, the system around him worked very hard to minimize consequences: implausible plea deals, kid‑glove treatment from prosecutors, and years of continued contact with elite institutions and individuals who had every reason to know exactly who he was.

In other words, Epstein’s “cabal” is not separate from the authoritarian international; it is one of the places where its financial, political, and cultural strands knotted together. Epstein cultivated ties with royals, cabinet ministers, intelligence‑adjacent figures, central bankers, tech founders, Ivy League scientists, and global NGOs, often using philanthropy, invitations, and “networking” as the official cover. The files suggest that, alongside the abuse itself, there were other exchanges taking place: insider information about markets and regulatory cases, introductions that smoothed over legal problems for banks and firms, quiet favors for officials who could make things go away. The point is not that there was a single master blackmail file controlling everyone. It is that Epstein was a trusted node in a culture where mutual silence, status protection, and “taking care of our own” were the default settings.

That culture is exactly what allows an authoritarian international to flourish. It depends on people who feel more loyalty to their transnational peer group than to any public, who are confident that their peers will close ranks when something ugly surfaces. Researchers who have gone through the files describe a classic “boy’s club” dynamic, in which mostly men use their wealth and positions to convert status into immunity, shifting seamlessly between government, finance, academia, and media while quietly solving one another’s problems. When those are the people designing trade deals, overseeing intelligence budgets, funding think tanks, and sitting on university boards, it is not hard to see how law and regulation bend around them.

The Epstein saga also shows how hard it is for ordinary people to get real accountability out of such a network. It took years of investigative work, multiple lawsuits, and the eventual death of the central figure in custody before the US Department of Justice even began complying with a law demanding full release of federal Epstein‑related documents—and even then, millions of pages were withheld or heavily redacted. The slow‑motion drip of revelations, combined with the lack of high‑level prosecutions beyond Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, has done exactly what you would expect in an age already saturated with conspiracy thinking: confirm that something is deeply wrong at the top while encouraging people to reach for the wildest possible stories to explain it.

Seen through the lens of this essay, the Epstein files are not proof that “the lizard people” secretly run everything. They are something more mundane and more damning: evidence that a transnational layer of power exists, that it protects its own even in the face of monstrous crimes, and that the mechanisms of democratic accountability barely scratch its surface. That is the authoritarian international in miniature: not an all‑controlling central brain, but a dense mesh of relationships in which money, status, sex, information, and impunity circulate freely among those invited inside, while everyone else is told to trust the system.


The Authoritarian International Goes Digital

The twentieth‑century authoritarian international was built on cash, arms deals, and intelligence liaisons. The twenty‑first‑century version adds a powerful new layer: data and digital infrastructure.

Companies like NSO Group, which sells Pegasus spyware, show how this works. A firm domiciled in a formally democratic country develops tools that can compromise smartphones globally. Authoritarian and hybrid regimes buy those tools, ostensibly for “counterterrorism,” then deploy them against journalists, opposition figures, lawyers, and activists. The line between state surveillance and private enterprise dissolves. Regulators look the other way because these tools also serve their own intelligence services.

Similarly, social media platforms become both battleground and weapon. Authoritarian regimes hire troll farms and bot networks to shape online discourse, harass opponents, and flood the zone with disinformation. Democracies are hardly innocent; political campaigns and dark‑money outfits eagerly exploit microtargeting and algorithmic amplification. What matters is not who invented the tools, but who can afford to weaponize them.

In recent years, a new front has opened: the AI boom. Large language models and other AI systems are touted as productivity tools, but they also centralize power in the hands of a few firms deeply entangled with states. Governments fund AI research, demand access to models and data, and see in these systems not just economic potential but surveillance and control capabilities. Defense departments court AI labs; AI labs court defense contracts. Behind the buzzwords of “safety” and “alignment” lies a more basic question: who will own and govern the infrastructure that increasingly mediates how people see the world?

Here the authoritarian international shows its adaptive genius. It does not care whether a company’s branding leans “democratic” or “authoritarian,” “Western” or “Eastern.” What matters is whether the tools and flows of data can be brought into a larger bargain: we will protect your property rights and market position; you will help us monitor, manage, or manipulate populations when asked.


The Trump Administration Joins the Authoritarian International

If you want to see how this abstract machinery shows up in day‑to‑day politics, look at the Trump administration’s confrontation with Anthropic. In February 2026, Trump ordered every federal agency to “immediately cease” using Anthropic’s AI systems, with a six‑month phase‑out even for the Pentagon and other security agencies already running Anthropic’s models on classified networks. Within hours, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced that he was designating Anthropic a “supply‑chain risk to national security,” a label historically reserved for foreign adversaries and hostile vendors, not American firms under contract.

The trigger was not that Anthropic had sold out to a rival power. It was that the company tried to draw two red lines: no use of its models for fully autonomous weapons, and no use for mass domestic surveillance of Americans. Anthropic had signed a $200 million Pentagon deal in 2025 but sought contractual assurances that its systems would not be turned into engines for automated killing or blanket monitoring of the U.S. population. The Pentagon responded by insisting on the right to use the technology for “all lawful purposes” and set a hard deadline for Anthropic to give in. When the company refused, Hegseth moved to blacklist it across defense supply chains, and Trump ordered the rest of the state to fall in line.

Trump’s intervention did not challenge this logic; it reinforced it. By publicly ordering the state to tear out Anthropic’s systems and hinting at “major civil and criminal consequences” if the company did not “get their act together,” he signaled that in his administration’s view, the real danger did not lie in autonomous weapons or dragnet surveillance. The danger lay in any private actor claiming the right to constrain them. The message to the rest of the tech sector was simple: align your models with the security state’s broadest interpretation of “all lawful purposes,” or risk being treated as an enemy.

What makes this a textbook authoritarian‑international moment is not just the bullying of one firm. It is the choreography. Within hours of Anthropic’s blacklisting, OpenAI announced a new Pentagon deal to bring its models onto classified systems, promising “guardrails” negotiated behind closed doors. The state flexes its power to punish a company that tries to draw public red lines; another, more compliant firm steps forward to fill the gap. Lawyers and lobbyists will now work to launder this episode into a story about “national security,” “supply‑chain integrity,” and “contracting norms.” Meanwhile, the underlying bargain tightens: AI for war and surveillance is normal; attempts to condition or slow that fusion are treated as subversive.

At the same time that Trump is using procurement blacklists and security designations to discipline a single AI firm, his administration is busy hollowing out the parts of the state that once served as weak antibodies against the authoritarian international. New rules modeled on “Schedule F” strip job protections from tens of thousands of civil servants in policy roles, turning them into at‑will employees who can be fired for disloyalty and replaced with movement cadres. Inspectors general and heads of watchdog agencies are sacked, hiring is quietly rewritten around ideology tests and “favorite Trump policies,” and allied organizations openly promise to “bend or break the bureaucracy to the presidential will.”

This is what “destroying the deep state” looks like in practice: not tearing down the fusion of money, security, and data that actually runs things, but purging the remaining pockets of professional autonomy and replacing them with loyal managers. The international oligarchic‑security complex does not fear that kind of state. It needs it. A loyalist bureaucracy is simply an on‑shore franchise, a local operating company for a larger authoritarian order.

In that sense, the Trump administration is not an outlier standing outside the authoritarian international. It is one of its political expressions. The same White House that rants about the “deep state” and “tyranny of bureaucrats” has no problem wielding the real deep state—security designations, procurement blacklists, informal threats—to discipline anyone who resists folding their technology into the emerging global police architecture. The rhetoric is anti‑establishment; the practice is the consolidation of a new establishment in which the fusion of platform power and state violence is taken for granted.


Manufacturing Legitimacy, Neutralizing Democracy

The authoritarian international does not only work through brute force. It also manufactures legitimacy. That is part of what makes it so hard to see.

Think tanks, consultancy firms, and elite universities play a quiet role here. They frame austerity measures, privatizations, and “labor market reforms” as painful but necessary. They write white papers explaining why infrastructure must be financed through public‑private partnerships, why security requires expanded surveillance powers, why “disruptive innovation” should be lightly regulated. The language is dry, technocratic, and ostensibly non‑ideological. It presents choices as inevitabilities.

Media ecosystems also shape perception. In some countries, oligarchs directly own major newspapers and TV stations. In others, platform algorithms and advertising incentives reward outrage, distraction, and the depoliticization of economic questions. It becomes easier to fight over culture‑war symbols than to examine who actually owns what and how decisions are made.

Meanwhile, formal democratic mechanisms are quietly hollowed out. Political parties become fundraising machines more than vehicles for membership‑based representation. Lobbyists and “policy entrepreneurs” shuttle between government and industry. Regulatory agencies are captured by the sectors they are supposed to oversee. Courts, where they remain independent at all, are increasingly asked to adjudicate questions that should have been settled democratically, which in turn invites political counter‑attacks on judicial independence.

None of this means elections cease to matter. They matter a great deal, especially for those most exposed to policy swings. But the authoritarian international ensures that many of the deepest decisions—the parameters of financialization, the offshoring of production, the architecture of surveillance—remain off the table, insulated from majoritarian challenge.

In that world, the term “deep state” is not entirely wrong, but the subject is. The threat is not a cabal of social workers and schoolteachers secretly running the show. It is an informal but highly effective coalition of economic, security, and informational power centers that can outlast particular governments and bend policy in its favor regardless of who nominally wins.


Case Snapshots: From Project States to Client States

The pattern becomes clearer if we look at a few stylized snapshots.

In one, a small resource‑rich country discovers new mineral deposits vital for green‑tech supply chains. International mining conglomerates arrive, each backed by their home states’ diplomats and development agencies. Local elites see an opportunity; they negotiate contracts that favor the companies, skim rents through offshore entities, and use a portion of the windfall to fund patronage networks. When local communities resist environmental destruction, state security forces crack down, often with training and equipment provided under “counterterrorism” or “stability” programs. Western NGOs issue reports; nothing fundamental changes.

In another, a formally democratic country becomes dependent on a handful of global tech platforms for everything from communication to logistics. Those platforms develop intimate knowledge of the population’s behavior, beliefs, and networks. Political campaigns hire platform‑adjacent data firms to microtarget voters. Intelligence agencies quietly demand “lawful access” or exploit zero‑day vulnerabilities. When a scandal breaks about misuse of data, the result is a round of hearings, a mild fine, and a few new disclosure rules. The underlying power asymmetry remains intact.

In a third, a rising authoritarian power invests heavily in digital infrastructure abroad: telecom networks, data centers, “safe city” surveillance packages. These projects come with turnkey censorship and monitoring capabilities baked in. Local regimes adopt them because they promise security and modernity on the cheap. The exporting state gains leverage: in a crisis, it can threaten to withdraw maintenance, deny software updates, or quietly surveil dissidents using the same systems.

Each of these vignettes looks different on the surface, but they share a logic: state power, corporate power, and sometimes outright criminal power cooperating to organize society from above, with minimal democratic input. That is the authoritarian international in practice.


Why the Old Categories Fail Us

One of the reasons it is so hard to think about this coherently is that our inherited political categories are not designed for it. We tend to imagine a spectrum from “democracy” to “authoritarianism,” with clear‑cut types like liberal democracies, military juntas, one‑party states, and so on. We also tend to separate “public” and “private,” as if the state were one thing and markets another.

The authoritarian international cuts across these lines. It can operate in constitutional democracies and one‑man dictatorships alike. It uses private finance to capture public institutions, and public institutions to protect private fortunes. It is perfectly comfortable with elections, so long as those elections do not threaten its core interests.

That is why the argument over whether a specific leader or government is “really fascist” can sometimes miss the point. Classic fascism in the interwar sense was a particular type of mass movement and regime: openly anti‑liberal, violently nationalist, corporatist, and committed to mobilizing the population in service of the state. Today, you can have regimes that borrow fascist aesthetics and techniques without fully reproducing that model. You can also have a global order that incorporates authoritarian elements without marching under a single banner.

This is not to say that words do not matter. They do. There is value in being precise about what constitutes fascism, what counts as mere authoritarian populism, what is “only” oligarchic drift. But at a certain level, the authoritarian international does not care what we name it. It cares whether we can disrupt its flows of money, data, and force.


Resistance in a Captured World

If this sounds bleak, that is because it is. But bleak is not the same as hopeless. Systems like this are powerful, yet fragile. They depend on a steady supply of legitimacy, data, and labor from the very people they marginalize.

One line of resistance is obviously institutional: rebuilding unions, professional associations, and grassroots movements that can challenge corporate and security power from below. Historically, the rare moments when oligarchic orders were forced to concede—whether in the New Deal era, post‑war social democracy, or anti‑colonial struggles—came when mass movements made elites fear loss of control more than loss of profit. Those moments were messy, violent, and compromised, but they changed what was possible.

Another line runs through the infrastructure itself. Engineers, designers, and workers inside tech and security institutions still possess leverage, however limited. Whistleblowers, unionization efforts within tech, and internal revolts against certain contracts (for example, with military or border agencies) can slow or complicate the authoritarian international’s plans. These acts will not topple the system on their own, but they can create fissures.

A third line is cultural and narrative. One of the authoritarian international’s greatest advantages is that it has made its existence boring. Tax havens, escrow accounts, data brokers, revolving doors, memorandum of understanding: these are not the stuff of thrilling stories. Yet behind them lie decisions that shape who eats, who drowns, who is watched, and who disappears. Writers, journalists, artists, and educators who patiently connect the dots—who show how a server farm in Iowa connects to a drone strike in Yemen, or how a housing crisis in London connects to capital flight from kleptocracies—help make the invisible visible.

None of this guarantees victory, whatever that might mean. The authoritarian international is not going to vanish because a few people write sharply worded essays. But visibility is a precondition for any meaningful response. You cannot fight what you cannot name, and you cannot name what you refuse to see.


The Deep State We Were Warned About

The strangest twist in this story is how badly the term “deep state” was mis‑aimed. For years, right‑wing media in the United States trained people to imagine a deep state made up of mid‑level bureaucrats, epidemiologists, and school officials, as if the real danger came from public‑health guidance rather than a revolving door between Wall Street, Silicon Valley, the Pentagon, and intelligence services. Q‑style conspiracies fixated on satanic cabals and secret pedophile rings, all while very public networks of billionaires, generals, and spooks were busily writing the terms of our future.

The result is tragic. People who sense, correctly, that the surface of politics is not the whole story are offered cartoons instead of analysis. They are encouraged to hate the people below them—teachers, nurses, civil servants—rather than the systems above them. Meanwhile, the authoritarian international keeps doing what it does best: turning states into investment vehicles, turning security into a growth industry, and turning human beings into data profiles to be sorted and monetized.

The authoritarians of the twenty‑first century are not, for the most part, men in uniforms shouting from balconies. They are board members and ministers, tech founders and hedge‑fund managers, sheikhs and security chiefs, who have learned that governing is easier when the boundaries between state, market, and mafia are porous. They are perfectly happy to let us rage at phantoms, so long as the servers stay on, the contracts are honored, and the profits keep flowing.

Seeing them clearly will not, by itself, bring them down. But it at least allows us to stop mistaking the stage for the backstage, the puppets for the strings.

References

Anthropic. “Statement on the Comments from Secretary of War Pete Hegseth.” Anthropic, February 26, 2026. https://www.anthropic.com/news/statement-comments-secretary-war

Axios. “Trump Moves to Blacklist Anthropic AI from All Government Work.” Axios, February 27, 2026. https://www.axios.com/2026/02/27/anthropic-pentagon-supply-chain-risk-claude

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Glenny, Misha. McMafia: A Journey Through the Global Criminal Underworld. New York: Knopf, 2008.
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The State of the Union Is an Oligarchs’ Paradise

25 Wednesday Feb 2026

Posted by xraymike79 in Collapse of Industrial Civilization, Mental Health

≈ 2 Comments

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American Oligarchy, Authoritarian Populism, Christian Nationalism, Civilizational Collapse, Class Warfare, Competitive Authoritarianism, Corporate Plutocracy, Democratic Erosion, Disaster Capitalism, Empire in Decline, Late Industrial Capitalism, Managed Decline, Neoliberal Order, Oligarchic Capitalism, Political Economy of Decline, Security State, Soft Fascism, Surveillance Capitalism, Technofeudalism, Wealth Inequality

The state of the union is strong, if you are an oligarch, a hedge fund, a defense contractor, or a data center. For everyone else, it is a slow emergency packaged as prosperity.

Last night, the President told us the story of America from a teleprompter the size of a drive‑in movie screen. The chamber was packed with donors, lobbyists, generals, professional Christians, and a carefully curated scattering of regular people brought in as human props, each one a tragic anecdote waiting to be weaponized against their own class. He spoke of “greatness” and “revival,” of “the most powerful economy in the history of the world,” as if the country were not a hollowed‑out shopping mall whose last three tenants are a police recruitment kiosk, a payday lender, and a Church of Patriotism pop‑up shop selling t‑shirts printed with crosses, rifles, and the word “FREEDOM” in distressed fonts. He called this strength. He called this order. He called this peace. He did not mention that the escalators are frozen, the roof leaks, and half the country is living on Buy Now, Pay Later plans for groceries. He assured you that everything is fine. You heard the subfloor creak.

We are told we live in a democracy. The numbers disagree. For decades now, political scientists have been politely clearing their throats and saying that ordinary citizens’ preferences do not matter in any statistically measurable way, that policy responds almost exclusively to the desires of economic elites and organized business interests. The conclusion, translated from academic politeness, is simple: you do not live in a democracy; you live in a shareholders’ meeting disguised as one. In practice, this means that if a policy improves life for the bottom 80 percent but annoys a Fortune 500 CEO, it is a “radical” proposal that “lacks bipartisan support.” If a policy squeezes the bottom 80 percent but nudges the S&P 500 upward for the length of a cable news segment, it is “responsible governance” and “pro‑growth reform.” If an idea involves taxing unrealized capital gains on billionaires, it is “class warfare.” If an idea involves cutting food aid for children, it is “hard choices.” The true state of the union is this: the ruling class no longer pretends to be embarrassed by any of this. They have taken off the mask, discovered that nothing bad happens to them when they do, and are now experimenting with how grotesque they can become before the walls move. So far, grotesque enough.

Officially, the middle class still exists. Politicians invoke it, journalists mourn it, think tank fellows use it as a unit of measurement: “this bill will cost X number of middle‑class households.” It is the Sasquatch of American political discourse, blurry, beloved, and functionally extinct. In the real union, millions of people with degrees, jobs, and LinkedIn profiles live one medical emergency away from ruin. Rents devour half of take‑home pay, sometimes more. Homeownership, the core rite of the mid‑century dream, has reverted to what it was under aristocracy: a thing you inherit. Two jobs is normal, three is admirable, and having time to sleep is a suspicious sign you are not “hustling” hard enough. The President speaks of ‘good jobs’ while standing atop a labor market where ‘good’ means you get an ID badge and are allowed to use a bathroom instead of a bottle. He praises “record low unemployment,” and neglects to mention that most people are simply too broke to stop working long enough to revolt. Meanwhile, the stock market screams new highs like a dying animal, its chart puffed up by a quietly devalued dollar, and we are asked to interpret this as a vital sign.

The union is united in name and fractured in practice. Between the coasts and within them, a patchwork of micro‑regimes has emerged where your human rights depend on your ZIP code, your governor’s ambitions, and which think tank ghost‑wrote the latest slate of bills. In one state, you can marry who you love, read what you want, and get healthcare without an armed escort. In another, school libraries are purged like a ritual exorcism, teachers are surveilled for ideological impurity, and pregnancy is considered a sacred obligation enforced by men with badges and laws masquerading as scripture. The President praises “states’ rights,” by which he means the right of local elites to experiment with new forms of cruelty without federal interference. The laboratories of democracy have been retooled as laboratories of deregulation and repression. One tests how quickly you can privatize water before anyone notices the cancer clusters. Another tests how many immigrants you can cage before the courts intervene, if they ever do. A third tests whether you can simply declare entire political movements “terrorist organizations” and then wait to see who objects out loud. Each successful trial becomes a model bill, copied, pasted, and rolled out nationwide like a software update to the operating system of soft fascism.

The union once liked to imagine itself secular, pluralistic, rational. That was the brand. Underneath, a different country was always there, bible‑belted and vengeful. Now the mask is gone. Law is openly written in the cadence of the pulpit. The line between church and state is drawn in disappearing ink. In this new dispensation, Jesus has been reborn as a white, gun‑owning small‑business owner who hates taxes and refugees. The Sermon on the Mount has been replaced by a strip‑mall prosperity gospel promising wealth in exchange for obedience, tithes, and votes. Immigrants, queer people, women with agency, and non‑conforming teachers are the demons to be cast out. The President speaks the language of this faith fluently, not because he believes in anything beyond himself, but because he recognizes a ready‑made theology of hierarchy when he sees one. It is the perfect spiritual operating system for an oligarchic order, a cosmology in which inequality is not a problem but proof of divine favor. You are poor because you lack faith, discipline, and hustle. They are rich because, in this theology, wealth is treated as proof that both God and the money system have chosen them. The flag stands beside the cross on the stage, like twin altars in the same theocracy. The book of Revelation is treated as if it were a policy manual, not a vision or a warning.

The climate is breaking. Infrastructure is aging. Systems from power grids to water pipes to hospital networks strain and falter. The union is not being rebuilt for the twenty‑first century; it is being cannibalized to provide quarterly earnings. Potholes become craters. The bridges that politicians promise to ‘build back’ first appear on campaign posters, then on live footage as they fall apart. Wildfire smoke becomes seasonal décor for the sky. Floods redraw maps. Heat waves dissolve the illusion that “indoors” is always safe. The response is not a Marshall Plan, but a subscription plan. Disaster insurance becomes a luxury product. Private fire brigades materialize where the homes are expensive enough to be worth saving. Gated communities install their own micro‑grids, while the public grid resembles that sinking mall: overstressed and undermaintained. “Resilience” becomes another word for “you are on your own.” The rich retreat into enclaves ringed with cameras and private security while the rest are told to show “personal responsibility” by stocking bottled water and praying their landlord does not raise the rent after the next flood. The state of the union is not one of renewal, but of managed decline, organized around profit extraction.

There was a time when private power needed to pretend it was vaguely accountable. Today, platform and cloud empires behave like miniature sovereignties. They issue de facto laws in the form of Terms of Service and enforce them with algorithms and moderators instead of courts. In this political economy, your speech rights are throttled not by a constitutional amendment, but by an opaque content policy tweaked after lunch by a product team. Your ability to work, get paid, or even exist on the map depends on your reputation score, your rating, your quietly calculated risk profile. Every movement, purchase, click, and biometric signal becomes raw material for behavioral prediction markets. The President talks about “innovation” and “freedom from government overreach.” He leaves unsaid that the vacuum is filled by companies that can remove you from social space, employment, and payments simultaneously, and then call it a routine enforcement action. It is cheaper and cleaner to outsource social control to code. Nightsticks leave bruises. Loss of access looks like a technical glitch. The true state of the union is one where feudal rights, once tied to land, are now tied to servers you do not own, in jurisdictions you cannot pronounce, owned by people you will never meet. The landlords of the new regime are data traffickers with billion‑dollar valuations and non‑disclosure agreements. You do not own your feudal hut. You rent your online existence.

The union’s foreign policy is simple: the world is a supply chain with people inconveniently attached. Every crisis is an opportunity to test new weapons, expand bases, open markets, and write new intellectual property rules. The President calls this “peace through strength.” He wraps it in the language of human rights while selling bombs to regimes that treat human beings the way hedge funds treat distressed assets. For the domestic audience, war remains a useful solvent. It dissolves class consciousness into patriotic foam. It justifies surveillance. It provides a stage for bipartisan unity. Nothing brings the two parties together like the promise of a good, clean, profitable conflict far from home. As the planet warms and resources dwindle, war becomes less a last resort than a line item in long‑term planning. Climate refugees are pre‑labeled as security threats. Strategic choke points on sea lanes are cataloged like inventory. The logistics of extraction and enforcement blur. The state of the union cannot be separated from the state of the empire. The domestic oligarchy sits atop global supply chains fed by sweatshops, rare earth mines, and compliant dictatorships. The union is the metropole of a system that exports instability and imports profit. When the President speaks of “our interests,” he does not mean yours.

We still vote. There are still primaries, conventions, debates, and yard signs. The television coverage is immaculate. The graphics teams deserve awards. Yet the core of the system has drifted. District maps are drawn like Rorschach tests designed to interpret any sign of dissent as an ink stain to be contained. Voter suppression is rebranded as ballot integrity. Polling places vanish from neighborhoods that vote incorrectly. The machinery is fine‑tuned enough that entire blocs of people can be rendered politically negligible without anyone having to say out loud what they are doing. Money, meanwhile, does the talking. The price of admission to serious politics is measured in the number of billionaires who consider you a safe investment. Lobbyists now write so much of the legislation that we might as well print their names beneath the bill titles, like author credits. The result is a puppet show where every ‘serious’ economic idea is just a variation of neoliberalism, either softened with nice rhetoric or enforced with open cruelty. The media calls any candidate who even mildly challenges oligarchic rule “polarizing,” “divisive,” or “unrealistic,” as if quietly looting the future were the very definition of moderation. Political coverage treats fascist flirtations as branding decisions rather than existential threats. We have not abolished democracy; we have turned it into a spectator sport, something you display with yard signs and online arguments and consume as election‑night drama, while the real machinery of the system stays hidden and locked away. The state of the union is not dictatorship in the old, cinematic sense. It is a competitive authoritarian theme park where the rides are real, the injuries are real, and the results are quietly rigged in advance.

While all this happens, culture must go on. There are shows to stream, albums to drop, content to produce. The spectacle cannot pause long enough for people to notice what is under their feet. We get endless police TV shows where the justice system’s only flaw is that its cops care too much, never that the system itself is violent or unjust. We get endless tech thrillers in which the billionaire genius is morally complicated but basically necessary. We get endless superhero movies in which salvation comes from a gifted individual operating above the law, never from organized people changing the law. Even the dystopias feel airbrushed. The apocalypse is always aesthetic: neon, rain‑slick, beautiful. The ruins smell of wet concrete and opportunity. The extras are attractive and just traumatized enough to be interesting. Reality is less photogenic: mold, debt, cheap drywall, chronic illness, the faint buzz of fluorescent lights in a waiting room where you hold a number and a plastic clipboard and try not to think about the bill. The state of the union is upheld by a ceaseless production of distractions that treat structural horror as harmless background noise.

And yet, beneath the noise and the managed despair, something else moves. Workers in warehouses, hospitals, and fast‑food chains are unionizing in places where unions were supposed to be folklore. Tenants are organizing rent strikes in buildings owned by private equity firms that do not even know the names of the streets they own. Teachers are walking out not only for raises, but for the right to teach something closer to reality than state‑approved fantasy. Mutual aid networks quietly do the work the state refuses to do, feeding people, evacuating them, getting them medicine, raising bail. They form the shadow infrastructure of a society that is not yet allowed to exist, but insists on being born. These are not yet revolutions. They are proofs of concept, evidence that people can act outside the scripts written for them by parties, platforms, and their corporate sponsors. The oligarchic order understands this better than some of its opponents. That is why it reacts so violently to even modest experiments in solidarity, why it treats a union drive at a coffee shop like an act of terrorism and a city council proposal to tax luxury properties like the storming of the Bastille. The state of the union is precarious precisely because the system has become too efficient at funneling wealth upward and too clumsy at disguising it. The contradiction is not sustainable forever. The question is not whether something gives. The question is what, and who.

The joke, of course, is that what we call the “State of the Union” is really the quarterly report of a civilization in slow liquidation, a going‑out‑of‑business sale for late industrial modernity where the fluorescent lights flicker, the shelves are half‑empty, and management insists everything is fine while prying the copper wiring out of the walls. The same oligarchic logic that treats workers as expendable inputs and ecosystems as externalities now treats the entire planetary life‑support system as a consumable, to be burned for one more bump in GDP and one more record stock buyback. The union is not merely unjust; it is structurally suicidal. The fusion of surveillance platforms, fossil capital, and security states has given our elites godlike powers of extraction and control paired with the emotional maturity of arsonists, so that every problem, from resource depletion and mass migration to pandemics and climate chaos, is either ignored, securitized, or monetized, never actually solved. In this sense America is not an exception but the flagship of a broader collapse, an empire that once hallucinated itself as the “end of history” now serving as the premier example of how a high‑tech, highly educated society can knowingly sprint toward ecological and social breakdown while livestreaming the whole thing in 4K, wrapped in patriotic branding and subscription services. The real punchline is that the “freedom” so loudly celebrated from the podium is the freedom of an economic death cult to keep sawing through the last load‑bearing beams, while the rest of us are told that asking for breathable air, drinkable water, and non‑precarious lives is utopian, irresponsible, or, worst of all, bad for investor confidence.

If the President were honest, his State of the Union might sound something like this: “My fellow Americans, the union is strong for those who matter. Your sacrifices have been invaluable in supporting record stock buybacks, historic CEO compensation, and the continued expansion of our security and surveillance industries. We understand that many of you are struggling with housing, healthcare, climate disasters, and a generalized sense of dread. We hear you. Your anxiety is essential fuel for our culture wars and an effective tool for enforcing discipline at work. We will continue to invest in the things that keep America great: armored vehicles for local police, tax breaks for data centers, and faith‑based initiatives that teach you to blame the poor, the foreign, and the different for your pain. Together, we will ensure that this great nation remains a safe haven for capital, a robust marketplace for private security and digital control, and a shining city on a hill you may admire from a distance but never afford to live in. God bless America, and God bless our quarterly returns.” The applause would be thunderous. The cameras would pan across smiling faces. Pundits would praise the speech as “presidential.”

Outside the chamber, the real union would look the way it already does. Essential workers would finish double shifts and go home to eviction notices. Delivery drivers would race an algorithm’s impossible expectations. Teachers would buy supplies for kids whose parents have three jobs. Families would refresh their bank apps and hope the next payment does not bounce. Communities would breathe smoke, drink suspect water, and pretend it is all fine because thinking otherwise hurts too much. And yet people would keep helping one another in ways that cannot be monetized. They would keep telling each other the truth in hushed conversations, in group chats, in stolen moments when the boss is not listening. They would keep imagining what it would mean for the state of the union to be measured not in stock tickers and missile inventories, but in whether everyone has enough and nobody has too much.

The ruling order calls this dangerous. It is correct. The real State of the Union is not the speech; it is the growing awareness that this cannot continue, and that somewhere beyond the billboards and slogans there must be a country that belongs to its people rather than its stock market. The question is not whether that country exists yet, but whether we will build it before the roof comes down.

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  • Hezbollah rejects US-brokered ceasefire deal between Israel and Lebanon
  • US defence secretary compares Bolivia protests to government ‘overthrow’

RSS All Tied Up and Nowhere to Go

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RSS Alternative Radio

  • [Allen Ginsberg] A 100th Birthday Garland for Allen Ginsberg

RSS AlterNet

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RSS Ambrose Evans-Pritchard

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RSS Anarchist News

  • ANews Podcast 469 – 5.29.26
  • In Memoriam: Bill Bachmann
  • Interview with Klasol at the IFA Congress
  • Interview with APO (Anarchist Political Organisation, Greece) at the IFA Congress
  • The Never-Ending Story of the Phoenix 2 Case
  • Fundraiser For More Anarchist Printing Presses in Abya Yala (Mexico)
  • The Labadie Collection- Why U-M Has the Largest Collection of Anarchist Ephemera in the U.S.
  • Every Alley Is Stud Alley
  • Unexpected Items: Issue 2 – June 2026
  • About “Chaotic Intentions” and Words of Panagiotis Argirou, formerly of CCF

RSS Antony Loewenstein

  • The Antony Loewenstein Podcast: Gaza Is Being Forgotten: On-the-Ground Truths
  • The Antony Loewenstein Podcast: Reacting to Viral Israel/Palestine Propaganda Clips
  • Double Down News Watch on Iranian meddling in Australia and beyond
  • The Antony Loewenstein Podcast: Life Inside Iran Today: Secret Stories from an Anonymous Insider
  • TRT World interview on Israel legalising the death penalty for Palestinians
  • TRT World interview on the weak “ceasefire” between Israel and Lebanon
  • The fearful growth of techno-fascism
  • The Antony Loewenstein Podcast: About Australia’s Antisemitism Royal Commission
  • TRT World interview on US/Iran/Israeli tensions
  • Does Israel risk being economically isolated?

RSS Apocadocs

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RSS Arctic Emergency Institute

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RSS Arctic Methane Emergency Group (AMEG)

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

RSS Arctic News

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RSS Arctic Sea Ice

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RSS Arctic Sea Ice News & Analysis

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

RSS Around the Coast Mountains

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

RSS Arthur Silber

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

RSS Arundhati Roy

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

RSS Arundhati Roy Says

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

RSS ASPO – USA

  • On hiatus
  • The Energy Bulletin Weekly – 23 October 2022
  • The Energy Bulletin Weekly – 17 October 2022
  • The Energy Bulletin Weekly – 10 October 2022
  • The Energy Bulletin Weekly – 3 October 2022
  • The Energy Bulletin Weekly – 26 September 2022
  • The Energy Bulletin Weekly – 19 September 2022
  • The Energy Bulletin Weekly – 12 September 2022
  • The Energy Bulletin Weekly – 5 September 2022
  • The Energy Bulletin Weekly – 29 August 2022

RSS Avedon’s Sideshow

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

RSS Bad Astronomy

  • Slate SoundBites for June 5, 2026
  • My Husband Has Just Two Years to Live. He Wants Us to Lie to His Children About the Details.
  • We Devised a “Friendly” Way to Keep Our Neighbor Out of Our Lawn. He’s Furious.
  • Think You’re Smarter Than Slate’s Homepage Editor? Find Out With This Week’s News Quiz.
  • Slate Mini Crossword for June 5, 2026
  • Pete Hegseth Sees One Type of Person as “Qualified.” You Can Probably Guess What That Is.
  • Donald Trump Can’t Stop Giving Everyone Around Him the Same “Gifts.” I Got Some Myself—and Quickly Saw What’s Going On Here.
  • Gradu-AI-tion Day
  • Is Graham Platner Too Messy to Flip Maine’s Senate Seat?
  • The Most Highly Anticipated Horror Movie of the Year Is Here. How Scary Is It?

RSS Barbara Ehrenreich

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RSS BBC: Science & Environment

  • Mangrove forests are healing after decades of human destruction
  • Failing sea defences 'disaster' for nature reserve
  • Next El Niño could be strongest in decades
  • 'Killer fungus' could be good news for habitats decimated by invasive moss
  • Exploding rocket casts doubts over Nasa's Moon plans
  • Farmers warn food security can't be taken for granted
  • Moment Blue Origin rocket explodes during test in Florida
  • UK's rudest chalk figure gets a glow-up to stop it fading in the rain
  • Why temperature records are being not only broken but smashed
  • Nasa unveils next steps to build permanent Moon base

RSS Big Picture Agriculture

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

RSS Bill Moyers

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

RSS Bit Tooth Energy

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

RSS Bizarro Blog

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RSS Brane Space

  • The Extremists Behind The Phony 'Religious Freedom' Bill
  • Why A Change To The Standard Lorentz Transformation Is More Advantageous for Theoretical Physics
  • Latest Kiplinger Report Details MoreProblems Associated With Medicare Advantage
  • Kudos To Federal Judge For Ordering Removal Of Trump's Name From Kennedy Center
  • Exchange Traded Funds Using Alleged Govt UFO-Alien Disclosure Are NOT A Good Investment
  • Solution to basic Mensa Algebra Problem
  • The WSJ Once Defended Birthright Citizenship - Maybe This Is Why Trumpers Are Now Using The Green Card Ploy
  • A Quantitative Look At The Physics Of Landau Damping (Conclusion)
  • All Experts Redux: What Is Local Thermodynamic Equilibrium Applied To Stars?
  • A Sobering Comment From Andrew Ross Sorkin On 60 Minutes: "A Crash Is Coming": What's Behind It?

RSS Brave New World

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

RSS Breaking the Set

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

RSS Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

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RSS Business Insider

  • May jobs report set to test whether the economy's strong run of job growth can continue
  • The beginner's guide to vibe coding
  • An AI chief for one of the world's largest banks says tokenmaxxing is a 'vanity metric'
  • JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon rolled out the red carpet for Elon Musk ahead of SpaceX's IPO
  • The $occer World Cup
  • A bull market grows up: Investors are finally separating AI winners from losers
  • A 24-year-old tennis pro struggled to pay for her hotel. Her Cinderella run at the French Open just earned her a 7-figure paycheck.
  • She won a religious exemption from using AI at work. The Pope's remarks could fuel similar appeals.
  • Goldman CEO says the bank's entry-level hiring may 'contract a little' as AI changes the talent mix
  • I left Salesforce in my 50s to start my own company. AI made it feel possible.

RSS C-Realm

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

RSS Cagle: Premium Cartoon News

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RSS Cassandra’s Legacy

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

RSS Censored News

  • Artificial Intelligence, Surveillance and Theft in Indian Country
  • The Epstein Files: The Bizarre NCAI Promotion -- On the Fashion Runway with Prince Charles
  • Standing Rock Water Protectors Ten Year Reunion, Aug. 12 -- 15, 2026
  • Russell Means: Hitler, the Indian Reorganization Act and Palestine
  • Shut Down Energy Fuels -- Uranium Mining and Radioactive Dumping on Native People
  • From Our Readers: Lloyd Vivola 'Raspberries'
  • Donate to Censored News: Reader Supported News
  • U.S. is Dynamiting Kumeyaay Sacred Mountain for Border Wall Expansion
  • Protest Energy Fuels Uranium Mines at La Sal, Utah, and Grand Canyon, Saturday, May 16, 2026
  • Uranium Ore Truck Collision Endangered Navajos near Shonto on Navajo Nation, May 6, 2026

RSS Center For Biological Diversity

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

RSS Center for Investigative Journalism

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RSS Center for Economic & Policy Research

  • 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 GOP, With Help of 4 Dems, Votes to Take Food Aid From Millions of Women and Kids
  • 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

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

  • Graham Platner denies an ex-girlfriend's report that he once twisted her arm, held her in a room
  • 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

RSS Democratic Underground – Good Reads

  • The Supreme Court has left limited alternatives for protecting minority voting rights
  • Senate OKs $70B immigration bill after rejecting efforts to permanently ban Trump's settlement fund
  • 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"

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
  • APNDX GAUGES A-D
  • APNDX GAUGES E - H
  • APNDX GAUGES I - L
  • APNDX GAUGES M-P
  • APNDX GAUGES Q-S

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

  • ASTRA Space Interferometry Webinar, 5 June 2026
  • Isotopes SAG Kickoff Meeting, 5 June 2026
  • GW SIG Seminar, 10 June 2026
  • Habitable Worlds Observatory SIG Seminar, 10 June 2026
  • ASTRA Initiative Seminar, 12 June 2026
  • AAS Meeting 248, June 2026
  • Fornax Initiative at AAS 248, June 2026
  • CRN SIG Seminar, 17 June 2026
  • 16th International LISA Symposium, June 2026
  • Community Science (Ad ASTRA) Workshop, Sept 2026

RSS Earth Observatory: Image of the Day

  • ASTRA Space Interferometry Webinar, 5 June 2026
  • Isotopes SAG Kickoff Meeting, 5 June 2026
  • GW SIG Seminar, 10 June 2026
  • Habitable Worlds Observatory SIG Seminar, 10 June 2026
  • ASTRA Initiative Seminar, 12 June 2026
  • AAS Meeting 248, June 2026
  • Fornax Initiative at AAS 248, June 2026
  • CRN SIG Seminar, 17 June 2026
  • 16th International LISA Symposium, June 2026
  • Community Science (Ad ASTRA) Workshop, Sept 2026

RSS Earth Observatory: Natural Hazards

  • ASTRA Space Interferometry Webinar, 5 June 2026
  • Isotopes SAG Kickoff Meeting, 5 June 2026
  • GW SIG Seminar, 10 June 2026
  • Habitable Worlds Observatory SIG Seminar, 10 June 2026
  • ASTRA Initiative Seminar, 12 June 2026
  • AAS Meeting 248, June 2026
  • Fornax Initiative at AAS 248, June 2026
  • CRN SIG Seminar, 17 June 2026
  • 16th International LISA Symposium, June 2026
  • Community Science (Ad ASTRA) Workshop, Sept 2026

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
  • WordPress.com Changelog: Launch a Podcast and Update Your Friends
  • Blueprints Gallery Is Now Available in WordPress Studio
  • Inside WordPress.com’s Security Response to the Essential Plugin Attack
  • Achievement Unlocked: Your WordPress.com Milestones Now Have a Home
  • Your Podcast Belongs With Your Blog and Newsletter

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

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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
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  • 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
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  • 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
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  • Rebels and Spies: the [GREAT] Graphic Novels of Vittorio Giardino
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  • Coming Soon to Your Digital Device: Dack Dixon, Special Agent

RSS FracTracker

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  • Howell Township Data Center Win: $1B Project Withdrawn After Community Meeting on Energy and Infrastructure Impacts
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RSS Get Real List: Chris Nelder

  • Moving on…
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  • My most recent project: NPV+
  • Taking over the grid
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  • New report casts doubt on fracking’s future
  • Stranded asset risks are larger than anyone thinks
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RSS Gil Smart

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RSS Glen Ford – Black Agenda Report

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RSS Global Research

  • The Roundup Deception: How Monsanto Helped Write the ‘Science’ That Claimed its Weedkiller Was Safe
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  • Video: Patrick Henningsen: Hezbollah Just Drew the Line: Israel Out of Lebanon Completely
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RSS Green is the New Red

  • Trump Supporter Promises Legislation to Label Protest as “Economic Terrorism”
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  • “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
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  • “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
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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
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  • 1931 is here again. We hope.
  • Iran has won, jamming Trump’s bombs right up his Strait of Hormuz
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  • How Do We Defeat Voter Suppression?A Tribute to the Spirit of Selma

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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

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  • 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
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  • 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

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  • Links of the Month: May 2026
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  • AI’s Biggest Beneficiary: Organized Crime

RSS I am Not a Number

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  • 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?

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  • 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
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  • Religiousness in Yoga Part 13: Antaraṅga Sādhana, Saṃyama, Kaivalya

RSS Ian Welsh

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  • 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
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RSS Idea Explorer

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RSS Idea Explorer – Big Pic Explorer

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RSS If You Love This Planet – Helen Caldicott

  • REGISTER TO WATCH: February 19, 2024 7 pm EST webinar Dr. Helen Caldicott and Martin Sheen
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  • 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

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  • Juristac is Protected
  • Chevron Outspends All Other Lobbyists in California
  • Mapping California's Factory Farming Industry
  • No Kings, No ICE, No War
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  • 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

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RSS Inside Left – The OFFICIAL Anti-Olympics Blog™

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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

  • Minnesota Mob Blindness: St. Paul Prosecutor Drops All Charges Against City Church Demonstrators
  • 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

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

  • Tyler and Alex Speak to OpenAI
  • 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

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

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

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

  • Links 6/5/2026
  • Iran War: Hezbollah Rejects Israel-Favoring Ceasefire, Casting More Doubt on “Deal”: Iran Agrees to Inspection of Bushehr Plant but No Enriched Uranium Concessions; Trump Warned of Oil Cliff as Private Debt Fund Wobbles Rise
  • “Se Vende Todo”: Javier Milei Seeks to Allow UNLIMITED Sale of Argentine Land to Foreign Investors
  • 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

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

  • The Moroccan Wall – The World’s Longest Continuous Minefield
  • Woman Has Late Pet Dog’s Ashes Mixed into Her Eyeliner Tattoo Ink to Have Him with Her Always
  • 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

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
  • Trump Announces $700 Million in Funds Meant to Boost Coal Industry (Gift Article)
  • Dismay as Trump officials to dismantle key ocean monitoring system
  • Trump administration dismantles ambitious ocean monitoring program
  • 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.

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

  • Brussels would sooner see Ukraine in NATO than EU – Lavrov
  • ‘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’

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

  • Cybersécurité : l’erreur fatale qui menace 80% des freelances
  • 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

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 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

  • Friday: Hili dialogue
  • The duck situation at Botany Pond. . .
  • Readers’ wildlife photos
  • Thursday: Hili dialogue
  • Jesus ‘n’ Mo ‘n’ Ganesh
  • Readers’ wildlife photos
  • Wednesday: Hili dialogue

RSS Wild Ancestors

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

RSS William Bowles

  • 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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RSS Zoriah

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

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