thedailysquib | In a remarkable admission by former Nixon era Secretary of State,
Henry Kissinger, reveals what is happening at the moment in the world
and particularly the Middle East. [ACCURATE SATIRE]
Speaking from his luxurious Manhattan apartment, the elder statesman,
who will be 89 in May, is all too forward with his analysis of the
current situation in the world forum of Geo-politics and economics.
“The United States is bating China and Russia, and the final nail in
the coffin will be Iran, which is, of course, the main target of Israel.
We have allowed China to increase their military strength and Russia to
recover from Sovietization, to give them a false sense of bravado, this
will create an all together faster demise for them. We’re like the
sharp shooter daring the noob to pick up the gun, and when they try,
it’s bang bang. The coming war will will be so severe that only one
superpower can win, and that’s us folks. This is why the EU is in such a
hurry to form a complete superstate because they know what is coming,
and to survive, Europe will have to be one whole cohesive state. Their
urgency tells me that they know full well that the big showdown is upon
us. O how I have dreamed of this delightful moment.”
“Control oil and you control nations; control food and you control the people.”
Mr Kissinger then added: “If you are an ordinary person, then you can
prepare yourself for war by moving to the countryside and building a
farm, but you must take guns with you, as the hordes of starving will be
roaming. Also, even though the elite will have their safe havens and
specialist shelters, they must be just as careful during the war as the
ordinary civilians, because their shelters can still be compromised.”
After pausing for a few minutes to collect his thoughts, Mr Kissinger, carried on:
“We told the military that we would have to take over seven Middle
Eastern countries for their resources and they have nearly completed
their job. We all know what I think of the military, but I have to say
they have obeyed orders superfluously this time. It is just that last
stepping stone, i.e. Iran which will really tip the balance. How long
can China and Russia stand by and watch America clean up? The great
Russian bear and Chinese sickle will be roused from their slumber and
this is when Israel will have to fight with all its might and weapons to
kill as many Arabs as it can. Hopefully if all goes well, half the
Middle East will be Israeli. Our young have been trained well for the
last decade or so on combat console games, it was interesting to see the
new Call of Duty Modern Warfare 3 game, which mirrors exactly what is
to come in the near future with its predictive programming. Our young,
in the US and West, are prepared because they have been programmed to be
good soldiers, cannon fodder, and when they will be ordered to go out
into the streets and fight those crazy Chins and Russkies, they will
obey their orders. Out of the ashes we shall build a new society, there
will only be one superpower left, and that one will be the global
government that wins. Don’t forget, the United States, has the best
weapons, we have stuff that no other nation has, and we will introduce
those weapons to the world when the time is right.”
End of interview. Our reporter is ushered out of the room by Kissinger’s minder.
columbia | The Center on Global Legal Transformation at Columbia University in New
York is launching a call for proposals by junior researchers on
governing scarce, yet essential goods. Selected proposals shall be
presented at panel sessions at a conference held in New York on 20-21
June 2013. The research project is coordinated by Prof. Katharina
Pistor, the Director of the Center on Global Legal Transformation, and
Prof. Olivier De Schutter, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the
right to food.
A number of factors have led to dramatically increased pressure on
land and the essential resources it harbors: population growth and a
corresponding rise in demand for agricultural and other commodities;
competing uses of land between different forms of agriculture, resource
extraction, large-scale industrial projects and urban sprawl;
environmental degradation from climate change and unsustainable
practices; and trade and investment liberalization, among others. As a
result, water, food and shelter are increasingly considered scarce and
subjected to commercial pressures that make them inaccessible to many.
Private property rights regimes have traditionally been considered the
most effective institutional arrangement to allocate scarce goods and
combat what has been termed the “tragedy of the commons” – the
depletion of scarce common resources by actors who disregard the
carrying capacity of the land and bear no costs for their actions.
Individual property rights regimes lead to allocation of land to the
highest bidder, who is presumed to put the land to its most efficient
use. But conversion to private property regimes has also resulted in
widespread displacement of small holders and indigenous people and the
exclusion of many others from access to resources essential to their
livelihoods.
Two well-studied alternatives to private property rights are
collective governance by local authorities and centralized control.
However, neither fully addresses the problems of scarce, essential
goods. Collective governance is limited by a community’s ability to
manage collective action problems, but the governance issues we are
facing are those of a heterogeneous world with high social mobility
and rapidly changing social norms. Similarly, centralized control
depends on the authority and wisdom of the central decision-maker, who
may lack local knowledge and accountability. Political voice might
address problems of accountability, but how to organize voice in a
global world remains an open question.
Proposals should suggest models for governing essential, scarce
resources. They can be qualitative or quantitative; make use of
empirical data and field research or suggest a new theoretical
approach. They should address if and how the following three normative
goals
(the basis of the triangle to which the title refers) for managing scarce, essential goods can be realized:
• equity (universal access to those resources that are essential for human life);
• efficiency (in managing scarce essential goods and minimizing waste); and
• sustainability (arrangements that do not unduly interfere with future productivity or availability of essentials).
wired | Most people have pulled long-forgotten vegetables from their
refrigerator's depths at least once, and just the memory is enough to
make a stomach turn. But one man's fridge mold is another man's still
life. Estonian artist Heikki Leis' Afterlife is a veritable rotting cornucopia of vegetables photographed long past their prime.
"I was inspired by some potatoes I had once left out in a pot for too
long. They had started to mold and on closer examination the colors and
textures looked interesting enough to take some photos," Leis wrote in
an e-mail.
Leis then started experimenting with various fruits and vegetables.
He sometimes let them decay for two months, keeping them covered so they
wouldn't dry out. When Leis finished, he was truly finished. "I'm
tempted to say I ate them, but the truth is I just threw them away," he
said.
Leis said he'd be open to an expert's analysis of his rotting
concoctions, so Wired invited mycologist Kathie Hodge of Cornell
University, who's working on a book about food-decaying fungi, to look
at the work.
There are thousands of molds out there, and "we see them all the time
and yet we don't look at them. They live with us and we automatically
throw these things out," said Hodge, who took Wired on a tour of Leis'
moldy world, though not without a warning.
"Getting them to this level is probably not a good idea, so don't try this at home!" she said.
reuters | Financial institutions across the country still face legal
risks if they do business with marijuana shops because pot
remains illegal under federal law.
"If financial institutions are federally licensed or
insured, they must comply with federal regulations, and those
regulations are clear about conducting financial transactions
with money generated by the sale of narcotics," said Jim
Dowling, a former Internal Revenue Service special agent who
also acted as an anti-money laundering advisor to the Office of
National Drug Control Policy.
The ballot measures on Tuesday made Colorado and Washington
the first states to permit recreational marijuana sale and use.
Medical-marijuana laws have been around in some states for more
than a decade.
California was the first state to legalize medical marijuana
in 1996. With the addition of Massachusetts, which passed a
medical-marijuana ballot initiative on Tuesday, 18 states and
the District of Columbia now have such laws on their books.
The medical marijuana business was worth $1.7 billion in
2011 and growing, according to a study by financial-analysis
firm See Change Strategy.
The federal government does not recognize states' authority
to legalize marijuana under any circumstances, however. It has
targeted some medical-pot businesses for violations of the
40-year-old Controlled Substances Act, which classifies the drug
a Schedule 1 narcotic, meaning it is considered addictive and
with no medical value.
The Justice Department on Wednesday said its marijuana
enforcement policies remained unchanged. "We are reviewing the
ballot initiatives and have no additional comment at this time,"
its public statement said.
A Justice Department spokeswoman did not respond to a
request for additional comment related to banking activity.
Among the most disturbing political phenomena of our
times is the emergence in the newly created state of Israel of the "Freedom
Party" (Tnuat Haherut), a political party closely akin in its organization,
methods, political philosophy and social appeal to the Nazi and Fascist
parties. It was formed out of the membership and following of the former
Irgun Zvai Leumi, a terrorist, right-wing, chauvinist organization in Palestine.
The current visit of Menachem
Begin, leader of this party, to the United States is obviously calculated
to give the impression of American support for his party in the coming
Israeli elections, and to cement political ties with conservative Zionist
elements in the United States. Several Americans of national repute have
lent their names to welcome his visit. It is inconceivable that those who
oppose fascism throughoutthe world, if correctly informed as to Mr. Begin's
political record and perspectives, could add their names and support to
the movement he represents.
Before irreparable damage is done by way of financial
contributions, public manifestations in Begin's behalf, and the creation
in Palestine of the impression that a large segment of America supports
Fascist elements in Israel, the American public must be informed as to
the record and objectives of Mr. Begin and his movement. The public avowals
of Begin's party are no guide whatever to its actual character. Today they
speak of freedom, democracy and anti-imperialism, whereas until recently
they openly preached the doctrine of the Fascist state. It is in its actions
that the terrorist party betrays its real character; from its past actions
we can judge what it may be expected to do in the future.
Attack on Arab Village
A shocking example was their behavior in the Arab village
of Deir Yassin. This village, off the main roads and surrounded by Jewish
lands, had taken no part in the war, and had even fought off Arab bands
who wanted to use the village as their base. On April 9 (THE NEW YORK TIMES),
terrorist bands attacked this peaceful village, which was not a military
objective in the fighting, killed most of its inhabitants ? 240men, women,
and children - and kept a few of them alive to parade as captives through
the streets of Jerusalem. Most of the Jewish community was horrified at
the deed, and the Jewish Agency sent a telegram of apology to King Abdullah
of Trans-Jordan. But the terrorists, far from being ashamed of their act,
were proud of this massacre, publicized it widely, and invited all the
foreign correspondents present in the country to view the heaped corpses
and the general havoc at Deir Yassin. The Deir Yassin incident exemplifies
the character and actions of the Freedom Party.
Within the Jewish community they have preached an admixture
of ultranationalism, religious mysticism, and racial superiority. Like
other Fascist parties they have been used to break strikes, and have themselves
pressed for the destruction of free trade unions. In their stead they have
proposed corporate unions on the Italian Fascist model. During the last
years of sporadic anti-British violence, the IZL and Stern groups inaugurated
a reign of terror in the Palestine Jewish community. Teachers were beaten
up for speaking against them, adults were shot for not letting their children
join them. By gangster methods, beatings, window-smashing, and wide-spread
robberies, the terrorists intimidated the population and exacted a heavy
tribute.
The people of the Freedom Party have had no part in the
constructive achievements in Palestine. They have reclaimed no land, built
no settlements, and only detracted from the Jewish defense activity. Their
much-publicized immigration endeavors were minute, and devoted mainly to
bringing in Fascist compatriots.
Discrepancies Seen
The discrepancies between the bold claims now being made
by Begin and his party, and their record of past performance in Palestine
bear the imprint of no ordinary political party. This is the unmistakable
stamp of a Fascist party for whom terrorism (against Jews, Arabs, and British
alike), and misrepresentation are means, and a "Leader State"
is the goal.
In the light of the foregoing considerations, it is imperative
that the truth about Mr. Begin and his movement be made known in this country.
It is all the more tragic that the top leadership of American Zionism has
refused to campaign against Begin's efforts, or even to expose to its own
constituents the dangers to Israel from support to Begin.
The undersigned therefore take this means of publicly
presenting a few salient facts concerning Begin and his party; and of urging
all concerned not to support this latest manifestation of fascism.
thenation | As planned Black Friday strikes draw increasing media attention,
Walmart continues to publicly dismiss the actions as stunts and the
workers involved as an unrepresentative fringe. But workers charge that
behind closed doors, the company is waging a stepped-up campaign to to
intimidate them out of striking. That includes both alleged illegal
threats and punishments, and likely legal mandatory meetings designed to
discourage workers from joining the Black Friday rebellion.
Today, OUR Walmart filed the latest of dozens of National Labor
Relations Board charges against Walmart. The charge, announced this
evening, alleges that Walmart's national headquarters has "told
store-level management to threaten workers with termination, discipline,
and/or a lawsuit if they strike or engage in other concerted job
actions on Black Friday" and that managers in cities including San
Leandro, California, Fairfield, Connecticut, and Dallas have done
exactly that. It also alleges that Walmart Vice President of
Communications David Tovar "threatened employees" with his statements.
OUR Walmart says it is seeking "immediate intervention" to remedy the
alleged crimes. In an e-mailed statement, American Rights at Work
Research Director Erin Johansson said, "Walmart appears to be issuing
serious threats to employees to stop them from exercising their rights
under law."
In past interviews, Walmart has denied that it illegally retaliates against workers for activism, and Tovar denied the latest allegations in an interview with The New York Times.
But the company has not denied that it holds mandatory meetings to
discourage it. (As in a union campaign, such “captive audience” meetings
are legal, though some “threats” are not.) OUR Walmart confirmed that
workers have reported being required to attend such meetings in the
lead-up to Black Friday.
Christopher Bentley Owen, an overnight stocker at a Tulsa Walmart supercenter, told The Nation he and his co-workers were lectured about the strike at a mandatory 10 pm
meeting last night. According to Owen, the highest-ranking manager on
the graveyard shift read, “word for word,” what appeared to be a
prepared script from corporate headquarters slamming the Black Friday
actions planned by the labor group OUR Walmart. The statement called OUR
Walmart a “wholly owned subsidiary” of the United Food & Commercial
Workers Union, called its actions a “stunt,” and warned that by
discouraging customers, the Black Friday actions would hurt employees’
end-of-quarter bonuses. Rather than downplaying it, said Owen, “It
seemed like they were treating it like the notion of people picketing
outside of stores could be a big deal.”
Owen said that his manager read, verbatim, a list of questions and
answers that appeared to have been designed to instruct managers how to
respond to workers’ questions, rather than to be read word for word.
According to Owen, the manager read a hypothetical question from a
worker who had heard that the strikes were legally protected, followed
by an answer that, “It seems to us that this action is not protected by
the law.” He read a hypothetical question from a worker about whether
striking on Friday could lead to punishment, and then, “Answer: No
comment.” After reading that, said Owen, “He kind of chuckled.”
Judging by the scripted questions and answers, said Owen, “They want
to communicate to us, or plant the idea in our heads, that we could get
disciplined.” Owen described the statement as “very much
corporate-speak. It didn’t seem like it was written by our guy.” When
the co-manager opened the floor for actual questions, said Owen, no one
spoke up.
thenation | Weeks into a wave of historic strikes, and days before a planned Black Friday showdown, Walmart has filed a National Labor Relations Board charge
alleging that the pickets are illegal and asking for a judge to shut
them down. Walmart is no stranger to the NLRB: labor groups have filed
numerous charges there accusing the retail giant of punishing or
threatening activist workers, including dozens over the past few months.
But this charge is the first one filed by
the company in a decade. It will pose a decision for a judge and, even
sooner, for the Labor Board’s Obama-appointed acting general counsel,
who’s been a lightning rod for past Republican attacks.
The National Labor Relations Board, created by the 1935 National
Labor Relations Act, is tasked with enforcing and interpreting private
sector labor law. Walmart’s charge, filed Thursday night and reported
by Reuters Friday evening, sets two processes in motion. The first,
which could take months, is the full investigation and resolution of the
allegation, beginning with fact-finding by board agents based in
Walmart’s backyard (NLRB Region 26, which covers Arkansas and three
other states). The second, which could advance as soon as this week, is
the decision whether to grant an injunction restricting strikes against
Walmart while the investigation proceeds. Experts say NLRB Acting
General Counsel Lafe Solomon would have final say over whether the board
seeks the injunction; if it does, a district court judge will decide
whether to grant it.
Reached over e-mail, Walmart Director of National Media Relations
Kory Lundberg said that the company filed the charge in part because
“many of our associates have urged us to do something about the UFCW’s
latest round of publicity stunts…” In an e-mailed statement, Dallas OUR
Walmart member Colby Harris called Walmart’s charge “baseless,” and
said, “Walmart is doing everything in its power to attempt to silence
our voice.”
bnarchives | In May 2011, the U.S. Supreme Court ordered the State of California to release 30,000 to 40,000 of its 140,000 inmates.[2] California’s prisons have become so overcrowded that the Supreme Court declared the situation unconstitutional. The decision was imminent. For nearly two decades, California, along with many other states, was busy getting ‘tough on crime’. In the early 1990s, the state enacted the ‘Three-Strikes Law’, which mandates life sentences for third-time serious crime offenders, and it pursued the country’s ‘war on drugs’ and other law-enforcement campaigns with increasing zeal. Soon enough, its prisons were overflowing at nearly twice their capacity.
The United States is often portrayed as the archetypical liberal model. It is the world’s largest, most prosperous ‘free market’ and the greatest generator of profit on earth. And yet this very liberal haven is also the largest penal system in the world. There are now more than two million inmates in its prisons and jails and another five million on probation and on parole. If you add these two numbers together, you get a ‘correctional population’ of over seven million. This correctional population is the largest in the world – both absolutely and relative to the overall population – and it is also the largest the country has ever seen.
To some, this combination of market prosperity and intense punishment may seem puzzling. Many people intuitively expect crime and punishment to correlate with poverty, backwardness and deprivation; to be a feature of the Third World, not the First.
Knowingly or not, this expectation is grounded in the conventional separation of production from state and capital from power. According to the liberal version of this separation, accumulation breeds economic prosperity, and prosperity in the economic sphere reduces crime and calls for less punishment in the socio-political sphere. However, if we discard this separation and instead think of capital as power, and of capitalism as a mode of power, the puzzle disappears. The greater the capitalization of power, the greater the resistance to that capitalization and the larger the force needed to prevent this resistance from exploding. As profits increase to make distribution more unequal, the result is mounting resistance from below, and this resistance in turn leads to retaliation from above. The rising crime and intensifying punishment that we now see in the United States are key manifestations of this dialectic of capitalized resistance and retaliation.
guardian | Many bullying experts rightly focus on the plight of vulnerable
children targeted by bullies but, before now, I wonder how many of us
considered being intelligent or talented a vulnerability? More than 90%
of the 1,000 11-16 year-olds we recently surveyed said they had been
bullied or seen someone bullied for being too intelligent or talented.
Worryingly, this means our children and young people are shying away
from academic achievement for fear of victimisation.
Almost half
of children and young people (49.5%) have played down a talent for fear
of being bullied, rising to 53% among girls. One in 10 (12%) said they
had played down their ability in science and almost one in five girls
(18.8%) and more than one in 10 boys (11.4%) are deliberately
underachieving in maths – to evade bullying.
The government has
recently pledged funding to develop a new maths course for sixth-formers
based on the assumption that current maths courses are inaccessible to
youngsters who can't see the relevance of the subject to their lives.
What our findings are telling us though, is that there is more at play
here. And we want government to take note.
What used to be left in
the playground is now following children home, through social media.
And what may have been historically viewed as a short-term problem,
which many of us endured during our school days – but not necessarily
beyond – can have a dramatic impact on our young people's futures. Fist tap Dale.
usatoday | A fourth-grade teacher in southern Idaho is being criticized after
having her students use permanent markers to draw on the faces of
classmates who failed to meet reading goals.
Some parents and
administrators say the punishments given to nine students in Summer
Larsen's class were inappropriate and left the children feeling shamed.
Cindy
Hurst said recently her 10-year-old son came home from school Nov. 5
with his entire face — including his eyelids — scribbled on with green,
red and purple markers.
"He was humiliated, he hung his head and
wanted to go wash his face," Hurst told The Times-News of Twin Falls.
"He knows he's a slow reader. Now he thinks he should be punished for
it."
Larsen, who has taught at the school for six years, didn't
respond to requests for comment. But Cassia County School District
Superintendent Gaylen Smyer confirmed what took place in her classroom,
though he didn't name Larsen.
The students were allowed to choose
their own incentive to meet the reading goal, but instead of a reward,
the class chose a punishment: Students who failed to meet the goal could
either stay inside at recess until it was met, or have their faces
written on by classmates who met the goals.
Nine students didn't
meet the goals, the paper reported Friday. Three chose to forgo recess,
and the other six chose to have their faces marked on.
"Although
all the students in the class agreed to the incentive, once it occurred
it was not so well received. Nor should it have been," Smyer said.
lfb | Banking industry insiders are upset with Amex and Wal-Mart, that
also is offering prepaid cards, because these prepaid accounts would
amount to uninsured deposits, according to Andrew Kahr, who wrote a
scathing piece on the issue for American Banker.
Kahr rips into the idea with this analogy:
“To provide even lower ‘discount prices,’ should Wal-Mart
rent decaying buildings that don’t satisfy local fire laws and building
codes — and offer still better deals to consumers? And why should
Walmart have to honor the national minimum wage law, any more than Amex
honors state banking statutes? With Bluebird, Amex can already violate
both the Bank Holding Company Act and many state banking statues.”
Kahr is implying that regulated fractionalized banking is safe and
sound, while prepaid cards provided by huge companies like Amex and
Wal-Mart is a shady scheme set up to rip off consumers. The fact is, in
the case of IndyMac, panicked customers forced regulators to close the
S&L by withdrawing only 7% of the huge S&L’s deposits. It was
about the same for WaMu and Wachovia when regulators engineered sales of
those banks being run on. Bitcoin supporters, unlike the general
public, are well aware of fractionalized banking’s fragility.
Maybe what the banking industry is really afraid of is the Amexes and
Wal-Marts of the world creating their own currencies and banking
systems. Wal-Mart has tried to get approval to open a bank for years,
and bankers have successfully stopped the retail giant for competing
with them.
However, prepaid credit cards might be just the first step toward
Wal-Mart issuing their own currency — Marts — that might initially be
used only for purchases in Wal-Mart stores. But over time, it’s not hard
to imagine Marts being traded all over town and easily converted to
dollars, pesos, Yuan, or other currencies traded where Wal-Mart has
stores. Fist tap Dale.
policymic | The first retail worker strike against Wal-Mart has spread from Los Angeles, where it began last week, to stores in a dozen cities, a union official said Tuesday. According to the Huffington Post, Wal-Mart workers walked off the job in Dallas, Seattle, the San Francisco Bay area, Miami, the Washington, D.C., area, Los Angeles, Sacramento, Chicago and Orlando, said Dan Schlademan, director of the United Food and Commercial Workers' Making Change At Wal-Mart campaign. Workers also went on strike in parts of Kentucky, Missouri and Minnesota, he said.
Tuesday's walkouts included 88 workers from 28 stores ... a fraction of the 1.4 million who work at Wal-Mart, the world's largest private employer. Until Friday, when about 60 Wal-Mart employees walked off the job for a day in LA, no Wal-Mart retail workers had ever gone on strike, the union said.
The workers are protesting company attempts to "silence and retaliate against workers for speaking out for improvements on the job," according to a United Food and Commercial Workers news release. Walmart workers, who are not unionized, have long complained of low pay and a lack of benefits.
These workers must be heard. Here are 9 reasons why:
cbsnews | This holiday season, the biggest discount chains in the U.S. will
tell the tale of two very different shoppers: Those that have and those
that have not.
Walmart (WMT),
the world's largest retailer, on Thursday acknowledged that its
low-income shoppers continue to struggle in the economy and issued an
outlook for the fourth quarter -- which encompasses the holiday shopping
period -- that falls below Wall Street estimates. On the same day, its
smaller rival Target (TGT), which caters to more affluent shoppers, said it expects results during the quarter to exceed the Street's projections.
The two discounters offer valuable insight into how Americans will
spend in November and December, a period that's traditionally the
busiest shopping period of the year. Some merchants depend on the
holiday shopping season for up to 40 percent of their annual sales, but
economists watch the period closely to get a temperature reading on the
overall mood of American consumers.
The forecasts seem
to confirm a trend that has taken shape during the economic downturn.
Well-heeled shoppers spend more freely as the economy begins to show new
signs of life, while consumers in the lower-income brackets continue to
hold tight to their purse strings even as the housing and stock markets
rebound.
Walmart and Target both are discounters, but
they cater to different customers. Walmart, which says its customers'
average household income ranges from $30,000 to $60,000, hammers its
low-price message and focuses on stocking basics like tee shirts and
underwear along with household goods. But Target, whose customers have a
median household income of $64,000 a year, is known for carrying
discounted designer clothes and home decor under the same roof as
detergent and dishwashing liquid.
NYTimes | On a clear morning in May, Ron Douglas left his home in exurban Denver, eased into his Toyota pickup truck and drove to a business meeting at a Starbucks. Douglas, a bearded bear of a man, ordered a venti double-chocolate-chip Frappuccino — “the girliest drink ever,” he called it — and then sat down to discuss the future of the growing survivalist industry.
Many so-called survivalists would take pride in keeping far away from places that sell espresso drinks. But Douglas, a 38-year-old entrepreneur and founder of one of the largest preparedness expos in the country, isn’t your typical prepper.
At that morning’s meeting, a strategy session with two new colleagues, Douglas made it clear that he doesn’t even like the word “survivalist.” He believes the word is ruined, evoking “the nut job who lives out in the mountains by himself on the retreat.” Instead, he prefers “self-reliance.”
When prompted by his colleagues to define the term, Douglas leaned forward in his chair. “I’m glad you asked,” he replied. “Take notes. This is good.”
For the next several minutes, Douglas talked about emergency preparedness, sustainable living and financial security — what he called the three pillars of self-reliance. He detailed the importance of solar panels, gardens, water storage and food stockpiles. People shouldn’t just have 72-hour emergency kits for when the power grid goes down; they should learn how to live on their own. It’s a message that Douglas is trying to move from the fringe to the mainstream.
“Our main goal is to reach as many people and get the word out to as many people as we can, to get them thinking and moving in this direction,” he said. “Sound good?”
The preparedness industry, always prosperous during hard times, is thriving again now. In Douglas’s circles, people talk about “the end of the world as we know it” with such regularity that the acronym Teotwawki (tee-ought-wah-kee) has come into widespread use. The Vivos Group, which sells luxury bunkers, until recently had a clock on its Web site that was ticking down to Dec. 21, 2012 — a date that, thanks to the Mayan calendar, some believe will usher in the end times. But amid the alarmism, there is real concern that the world is indeed increasingly fragile — a concern highlighted most recently by Hurricane Sandy. The storm’s aftermath has shown just how unprepared most of us are to do without the staples of modern life: food, fuel, transportation and electric power.Fist tap Arnach.
Claude's constitution and other matters AI
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Ross Douthat, Is Claude Coding Us Into Irrelevance? *NYTimes*, 2.12.26.
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That’s t...
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*February 4, 1913 -- February 4, 2026*
*Some notes: The life of the courageous activist Mama Rosa McCauley Parks*
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Remembering the Spanish Civil War
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This year marks the 90th anniversary of the launch of the Spanish Civil
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Covid-19 Preys Upon The Elderly And The Obese
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sciencemag | This spring, after days of flulike symptoms and fever, a man
arrived at the emergency room at the University of Vermont Medical Center.
He ...
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(Damn, has it been THAT long? I don't even know which prompts to use to
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Man, ...
First Member of Chumph Cartel Goes to Jail
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With the profligate racism of the Chumph Cartel, I don’t imagine any of
them convicted and jailed is going to do too much better than your run of
the mill ...