Sunday, March 15, 2026

 
Glorious Heritage or Erased Crimes? — Napoleon vs Orwell
Caption:
Is history an honest memory of the past…
or a story rewritten by those who win?
Context:
Napoleon Bonaparte understood how victory shapes memory. Empires often transform brutal conquest into heroic national mythology, turning battlefields into monuments of pride.
George Orwell warned about the manipulation of history. In works like 1984, he showed how regimes maintain power by controlling records, rewriting narratives, and erasing inconvenient truths.
Way Forward:
Understanding history requires questioning official narratives and listening to voices that were excluded, defeated, or silenced.
Question to Thinkers:
Is history a faithful record of the past…
or the story the powerful want remembered?

 Glory of War or Voice of the Fallen? — The General vs The Dead Soldier

Caption:
Is war a noble sacrifice for honor and nation…
or a tragedy paid for by those who fight it?
Context:
The voice of “The General” represents the traditional rhetoric of war—honor, sacrifice, and immortal glory promised to soldiers who fight for their nation. Throughout history, leaders have used such language to inspire loyalty and courage on the battlefield.
The “Dead Soldier” represents the perspective of those who actually endure the front lines. Many soldiers and writers—from wartime memoirists to anti-war poets—have described war not as glory, but as fear, suffering, and the loss of young lives.
Way Forward:
This clash reflects a timeless tension between patriotic ideals and the brutal reality of war experienced by those who fight it.
Question to Thinkers:
Is the glory of war real…
or a story told far from the battlefield?

Holy Poverty or Moral Outrage? — Mother Teresa vs Victor Hugo
Caption:
Is suffering spiritually meaningful…
or a moral scandal that society must end?
Context:
Mother Teresa emphasized compassion for the poor and often spoke about the spiritual value of serving those who suffer. Her work in Kolkata focused on caring for the dying, sick, and destitute.
Victor Hugo condemned the romanticizing of poverty. In works like Les Misérables, he portrayed hunger and misery as injustices created by society—problems that demand reform rather than spiritual justification.
Way Forward:
This tension appears throughout history:
some traditions interpret suffering through spiritual meaning, while critics insist that poverty is a human-made injustice that must be confronted and eliminated.
Question to Thinkers:
Should suffering be interpreted as spiritual meaning…
or as a call to transform the conditions that cause it?

 

Title:
Civic Duty or National Illusion? — Kennedy vs Carlin
Caption:
Is serving your country the highest civic duty…
or a story used to mobilize sacrifice?
Context:
John F. Kennedy famously urged citizens to contribute to the public good, arguing that a strong nation depends on the active service and responsibility of its people. His message reflected a vision of shared civic duty and collective purpose.
George Carlin often attacked political rhetoric and nationalism. Through satire, he questioned whether governments truly represent ordinary people or primarily serve powerful interests.
Way Forward:
The tension between civic responsibility and skepticism toward political power remains central to democratic societies.
Question to Thinkers:
When leaders call for sacrifice in the name of the nation…
how do we determine whether it serves the public or the powerful?
⚠️ Important:
Many quotes are adapted, paraphrased, or stylistically rewritten to capture the spirit and philosophy of the thinker, rather than being strict word-for-word historical citations.

 

Saturday, March 14, 2026

🚨 The US & Israel Have No Plan — Because Collapse Is The Plan🚨
I don’t think it’s controversial any longer to proclaim that the ruling class of the US and Israel (USrael™) are idiot psychopaths (idiopaths™). Some around the globe have noticed the two administrations sinking all of us into a possible global economic meltdown / possible nuclear war / probable really shitty 2026 don’t seem to have a “plan” or “strategy” or “inkling” for what happens next.
Even the lawmakers who yesterday attended a closed-door briefing about the administration’s Persian Incursion exited the room completely baffled as to A) the reasons for this war, B) the plan for this war, and C) the plan for what comes after said war.
The reason these witless millionaire lawmakers don’t understand the true causes of this horrific invasion of Iran is because they either don’t understand or choose to ignore the petrodollar and it’s role in dollar hegemony and then dollar hegemony’s role in making sure the US oligarchs can print enough money to own whole islands where they can sexually abuse minors with abandon. (I discussed the real reasons for the attack on Iran in a recent column here.)
However, the reason our 72% male 78% white Congress can’t get a clear answer from the Trump administration as to what comes next if the USrael™ idiopaths “succeed” in Iran is quite simply because it doesn’t matter to those making the decisions. The idiopaths don’t care. Collapsing the state apparatus is the goal. Asking them what comes next is like asking an arsonist what he’s going to build after he burns down the house. Chances are his response would be nothing more than a bewildered look akin to when you ask your dog for advice on a variable-rate mortgage.
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Some normal people — who don’t understand the sinister, soulless aims of the US imperial rulers — like to mention that the US hasn’t won a war since WWII. They like to say, “Every war the US has entered into over the past 50 years has been a disaster for us.” Unfortunately, that’s not true. It’s not true because “normal” people with feelings and souls and payment plans and moral cores can’t comprehend what counts as “winning” for the piping hot bags of douche who run the USraeli™ empire.
The clearest examples are Iraq, Libya, and Syria. Despite the breathless protestations of our various administrations at the time, the goals with the invasion of Iraq, invasion of Libya, and invasion of Syria were never to help the poor, suffering people in those countries. (Shock.) Our ruling psychopaths didn’t ever care about the women or the children or the innocents or the elderly or the pets. They didn’t give a shit. In fact, psychopaths are incapable of giving a shit about others.
The actual goal was to turn those nations into unstable, feeble, incapacitated, failed states. Once in that condition, they A) don’t pose a risk to Israel and B) don’t have the strength or ability to pump oil outside the petrodollar and align with other countries outside USrael’s™ sphere of influence.
— Libya ended up with a lawless state featuring such exciting tourist attractions as open-air slave markets and violent warlords.
— In the years following the 2003 Iraq invasion, Iraqis celebrated with extreme instability, sectarian fighting, and efforts to establish a government amidst violent insurgency.
— Following the fall of the Assad government in Syria, the country has been led by a US-installed rebranded Al Qaeda asshole. The national sport is extreme poverty, and the national flower is ethnic cleansing.
For the people of Iraq, Libya, and Syria, it’s an absolute horror movie. And yet, Americans no longer hear our politicians or our mainstream media announcing that the people of [fill in the blank] need our help. Not any longer. They apparently only needed USraeli™ “help” when there was a risk to the petrodollar. With the safety of the petrodollar secure, USraeli™ freedom bombs are no longer necessary.
USrael™ has no plan for an imaginary post-war Iran because the arsonist does not seek to rebuild the house. Cancer does not ask how to bring the host back to life. The US imperial aim is merely… hell. Hell on earth. No more stability. No more society. No more infrastructure. Essentially no more state. And for the US and Israel, this means no more resistance, no more threat, no more competition to the petrodollar. No more Iranian alliance with China.
Collapse is the plan.
But it increasingly seems that it won’t work. Iran is not Iraq. Iran is not Libya. Iran is not Syria.
Iran is a powerful and ancient society of 90 million people. Those who understand Iran far better than I do say Iranians will fight to the end. The US will not fight to the end because the majority of Americans don’t even know why we’re fighting at all. In fact, polling shows most Americans think Trump went to war with Iran to distract from the Epstein files.
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Tehran has officially declared that the digital and physical assets of major American tech giants are now considered legitimate military targets, a massive escalation in global cyber warfare. This announcement suggests that Iran views these corporations as active participants in the U.S. defense strategy, particularly those providing AI and cloud infrastructure.
By naming specific companies like NVIDIA and Palantir, the Iranian leadership is signaling a focus on the supply chains and software that power modern autonomous weaponry. This move brings the "Silicon Valley" elite directly into the crosshairs of a conflict that was previously limited to traditional military sectors.
Security experts warn that this could lead to a wave of sophisticated cyber-attacks targeting data centers, satellite communications, and global financial networks managed by these firms. The threat aims to disrupt the technological backbone of the West, potentially affecting everyday services for millions of civilians worldwide.
The targeting of private corporations marks a shift toward a total warfare doctrine where the line between state-sponsored defense and industry becomes completely blurred. These companies are now likely to bolster their own private security and cyber-defense protocols to unprecedented levels.
As these tech giants become central to the geopolitical standoff, the global market is reacting with extreme caution regarding the future of international tech partnerships. This development underscores how the modern battlefield has expanded from the high seas to the servers and chips that drive the global economy.

(Not pstd elsewhere)