13 April 2026

Pope Leo's Card on the Iran War; Enter the Dragon Phenomenon

 Pope Leo's entry into politics on the side of the anti-Trump crowd reminds me of Pope Benedict's criticism of Muslim radicals and the subsequent vacating of the papacy by Benedict. The political realm is dangerous for Christians to form opinions about publicly if they wish to be consistent with Biblical precepts. Christians are generally free to comply with the laws of a nation if not in direct conflict with the Bible or their conscience.

Pope Leo is a U.S. citizen and subject to U.S. laws. His opinions regarding U.S. foreign policy are implicitly partisan opinions and subject to counter-attack by the President of the United States. He can mail in his vote in the next U.S. Presidential election from the Vatican. It is a sort of battle of the twin towers for rhetorical dominance- comparable to the battles between groups in Italy from structures like the leaning tower of Pisa in the Medieval era (12th century). War is a continuation of politics through other means. The better remedy to wars in a world with original sin is to lure the donkey forward with the attraction of greed and away from conflict. Appeals to better human nature or 'better angels' are effective  perhaps, with Christians and less so with the majority of people.

https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/world/us/stick-to-matters-of-morality-jd-vance-tells-vatican-to-stay-out-of-us-politics-amid-trumppope-row/articleshow/130250208.cms

There is a mid-term election this year and using 'unnecessary wars' is a big part of the Democrat's platform for the event. I got an email from Friends of the Earth this morning making those points. I saw Adam Schiff on television swelling his political self-promotion so far as humanly possible with an attack on Trump in support of a new war powers resolution vote- quite hypocritical for Democrats incidentally; in the middle of an undecided war- perhaps to encourage Iran and certainly as a key talking point for the mid-term campaigns.

The Pope did not feel the slaughter of Iranian civilians in a national uprising against the theocracy was sufficient justification for military intervention by the U.S. Even if he dismissed the ascension to creation of multiple nuclear weapons as something that could be peacefully resolved (an unrealistic opinion), supporting non-intervention to the mass slaughter of civilian protesters that was wasn't yet over is a kind of evil itself. One might not want to refer to that kind of acceptance as a gospel paradigm. Jesus referred to Jerusalem being destroyed 37 years before the event, and a million Jews lost their lives in 70 A.D. In the time, if a military intervention was possible then (and it wasn't), that should have occurred. Jesus said he would have saved the Jews if it were possible, yet they could not believe, and so they were lost.

Matthew 23: 29-37

29 “Woe to you, teachers of the law and Pharisees, you hypocrites! You build tombs for the prophets and decorate the graves of the righteous. 30 And you say, ‘If we had lived in the days of our ancestors, we would not have taken part with them in shedding the blood of the prophets.’ 31 So you testify against yourselves that you are the descendants of those who murdered the prophets. 32 Go ahead, then, and complete what your ancestors started!

33 “You snakes! You brood of vipers! How will you escape being condemned to hell? 34 Therefore I am sending you prophets and sages and teachers. Some of them you will kill and crucify; others you will flog in your synagogues and pursue from town to town. 35 And so upon you will come all the righteous blood that has been shed on earth, from the blood of righteous Abel to the blood of Zechariah son of Berekiah, whom you murdered between the temple and the altar. 36 Truly I tell you, all this will come on this generation.

37 “Jerusalem, Jerusalem, you who kill the prophets and stone those sent to you, how often I have longed to gather your children together, as a hen gathers her chicks under her wings, and you were not willing. 38 Look, your house is left to you desolate. 39 For I tell you, you will not see me again until you say, ‘Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord.’[c]”

Gemini-"The Iranian government carried out a massive crackdown on citizens in early 2026 to suppress an unprecedented nationwide uprising that directly threatened the survival of the Islamic Republic. While official figures are lower, some internal estimates from Iran's Health Ministry and leaked documents from the Revolutionary Guard (IRGC) suggest the toll may have reached 30,000 to 36,500 deaths during the peak of the violence in January 2026. 

Why the Deaths Occurred (The Crackdown)

The high casualty rate resulted from a "shoot-to-kill" policy ordered by senior officials to "crush the protests by any means necessary" and spread fear."

Gemini-Pope Leo XIV, the first U.S.-born pontiff, has recently issued strong rebukes of President Donald Trump's rhetoric and the ongoing Iran war. 

  • Response to Threats: On April 7, 2026, Pope Leo called President Trump's threat that an entire "civilization will die tonight" in Iran "truly unacceptable". He emphasized that such threats against an entire population are a moral issue and violate international law.
  • Call for an "Off-Ramp": The Pope has urged the President to find an "off-ramp" to end the conflict and has referred to the U.S. military offensive as a "delusion of omnipotence".
  • "No Fear" of the Administration: Following Trump’s subsequent attacks labeling the Pope as "weak on crime" and "terrible for foreign policy," Pope Leo stated on April 13, 2026, that he has "no fear" of the Trump administration. He maintains that his messages of peace and reconciliation are rooted in the Gospel.
  • Rejection of War: In his Palm Sunday homily, the Pope warned that God "does not listen to the prayers of those who wage war" and noted that Jesus cannot be used to justify any conflict.
  • Call to Action: He has encouraged individuals to contact their political leaders and members of Congress to ask them to work for peace and reject war. 

The President has doubled down on his criticism, stating he will not apologize for his comments and accusing the Pope of "catering to the radical left". -end of recap

Pope Leo failed to discern that politics does not invariably fit into neat little categories that can be reasonably decided on a purely Biblical basis. On complex issues, a church leader would do well to heed Wittgenstein’s dictum: “Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent.”

Before throwing his hat into the political arena, he should think twice and speak once — first harmonizing the various issues through careful study and understanding, rather than rushing into declarations and suggestions.

Take the Iran war, for instance. It was a matter of preempting the final phases of Iran’s nuclear weapons program. Iran had already produced and stockpiled hundreds of kilograms of uranium enriched to 60% — a level with no credible civilian justification and only a short technical step away from weapons-grade 90%. Further enriching that stockpile to 90% would require relatively little additional effort, bringing Iran perilously close to multiple nuclear devices. People rightly care about such thresholds. Would Pope Leo have anathematized military action if it had been the Islamic State, rather than Iran, racing toward that same dangerous enrichment level while developing long-range delivery systems?

Philosophically, political leaders sometimes face Hobson’s choices — forced options where they must select the lesser of two evils, because inaction itself becomes the worst outcome. Pope Leo, however, was not in a forced option position regarding the Iran conflict. His are voluntary statements that muddy the waters. More carefully worded anti-war expressions would be better.

He could have stated that wars are terrible and that he does not recommend them perhaps elucidating suggestions as to how to contain the Shi'a government's will to have nuclear weapons peacefully. For a Christian leader, that is generally the proper limit of commentary. A thoughtful Christian may acknowledge that some wars can be just and moral, even while recognizing the profound weight of original sin and the immense opportunity costs that war imposes upon the peace we all hope would prevail.

In this case, the campaign to degrade Iran’s nuclear weapons capability — a direct threat to the United States and Israel — qualifies as a just war. Separately, Hezbollah’s decades-long attacks on Israel from southern Lebanon, enabled and directed by Iran, provide their own independent justification. Israel’s operations in Lebanon to create a defensive buffer zone against these persistent threats constitute a just war in and of themselves, separable from the Iran nuclear issue.

Pope Leo appears to show greater tolerance for the left’s support of the Ukraine war and its refusal to allow any negotiated settlement that would let Russia retain the Donbass. European leaders openly pursue the westward expansion of the EU and would like to place thousands of troops and hundreds of thousands of drones along the Russian borders. Hungary’s incoming Prime Minister Péter Magyar will vote to allow the EU to give Zelensky the €90 billion euro loan to fund two additional years of war.

Pope Leo was a partisan on Ukraine's side by default when he made a:

"Condemnation of "Imperialism": Pope Leo has stated that Russia is committing "evil" in Ukraine and, even before his papacy, characterized the conflict as an imperialist war designed to conquer territory."-Gemini

The entire Ukraine was part of Russia and the the Soviet Union for most of the 20th century. Historians new that wresting it away when Russia was recovering after 50 years of communist rule would bring about a war unless politicians were wise enough to share it.

In my view, Pope Leo demonstrated little understanding of Europe’s historic efforts to subdue or shrink Russia, the Venezuelan people’s struggle for freedom from the Chávez/Maduro regime, or the legitimate right of Israel and the United States to defend themselves against nuclear blackmail from an extremist Iranian regime — and against proxy attacks from groups like Hezbollah.

The world faces immense troubles in economics, the environment, and politics — compounded by violence, bribery, misunderstanding, fanaticism, and competing belief systems ranging from atheism and Islam to Christianity and socialism. Faith in God does not automatically confer political omniscience. Powerful leaders, even popes, require a circumspect, well-informed outlook if they hope to contribute meaningfully to a realpolitik balance that offers both stabilization and genuine prospects for human freedom and progress.

Securing Borders and Elections: Why Ideas Matter More Than Party Loyalty

Friends of the Earth emailed me asking for my signature on a petition against Donald Trump. They claimed he has started unnecessary wars in Venezuela and Iran. However, there were valid reasons for those conflicts.

Iran was enriching uranium to 60% — a level with no realistic peaceful purpose — and could relatively easily reach the 90% weapons-grade level required for nuclear weapons. Many Americans consider a nuclear-armed Iran with missiles capable of striking U.S. cities unacceptable.

Venezuela had been ruled by a dictator who suppressed free enterprise, empowered gangs and bureaucrats, and drove the country into economic collapse. Removing that regime offered a chance to restore liberty and opportunity.

I appreciate Friends of the Earth’s passion for the environment, but we must choose politicians based on ideas and principles — not personalities or party loyalty.

Even though Donald Trump’s ideas are generally preferable to those of the Democrats on national security, borders, energy, and economic realism, they are still not adequate on their own to directly correct the serious ecological insults to the Earth and its atmosphere. We urgently need a genuine policy of ecological economics — yet neither major party is seriously pursuing it.

Democrats, in particular, seem afraid to take clear, practical stands on critical issues: securing borders, verifying voter eligibility, raising wages for working Americans, increasing taxes on the ultra-wealthy, and managing a fair transition to sustainable economics as the economy rapidly shifts toward robotic and AI-driven production.

Instead, the Democratic Party has largely become a vehicle for anti-Trump hatred and cults of personality. That approach offers no real solutions.

Since the end of the Cold War, the Dow has risen roughly 1,500% while median household income has grown only about 30% in real terms. This massive disconnect, along with exploding public debt and wealth concentration not seen since the Gilded Age, shows how badly we need better ideas.

I support a strong, practical environmental agenda for a sustainable planet — but it can only succeed with a secure nation, secure borders, and a sustainable citizenry first. Without secure elections and secure borders, even the best environmental goals will fail.

Elections should be decided by substantive ideas and principles, not tribal hatred or personality cults. That’s why many Americans back Trump: not because of his style, but because — imperfect as they are — his ideas currently align better with the real challenges facing the country.

Divergence; Dow Skyrockets and Wages Stagnate for Decades

 It was remarkable when President Obama compelled Democrats to renew the Bush II tax cuts, and only Bernie Sanders voted against it. Social Security is set to become insolvent in five or six years, and politicians are paralyzed regarding fixes. Making everyone contribute a proportionate amount of income would fix it, yet the rich are effectively exempt. The populace has become used to not taxing the rich proportionately or even progressively and instead letting public debt accumulate — and that does not even make up for the loss of tax revenue.

The Dow has risen more than 1,566% since the end of the Cold War, while U.S. median income has risen only about 30%. Wages are largely stagnant or even in relative decline, while the concentration of wealth has reached levels not seen in human history — except perhaps in the British Empire at its peak.

A nation needs its rich to participate with an egalitarian spirit politically. Sharing the economic burden should be a privilege for the rich. The ancient Spartan system that Plato and Socrates so admired — which they saw as a model for the Republic, with a few tweaks such as placing a pair of philosophers as kings in the ideal society — was remarkably egalitarian.

Capitalism does value individual enterprise, yet lacking public egalitarianism and realism, it promotes accumulation beyond a rational level, even to the detriment of a nation’s economic well-being and that of its citizens. It is not a guaranteed “basketball Jones” that makes a virtue of greed. There is no formula that exempts the citizenry from having an adequate level of economic realism, such as pure greed for its own sake asked Gemini about that-

Gary- Could the Dow be over-valued? I recall when it was at 3000-5000 just before the end of the cold war. Now it often reaches 50,000, yet wages haven’t gone up an order of magnitutde to keep pace. How has the Dow become hyper-inflated while wages have stagnated adjusted for inflation since the end of the Cold Wat and for men in the U.S.A., since the 1970s?

Could the stock market crash without the economy crashing. A downward adjustment to 25,000 would be regarded as a crash yet it would seem more of a rectification to me.

Gemini-The divergence between the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) and typical American wages is one of the most significant shifts in modern economic history. While the Dow has climbed from around 3,000 in 1990 to nearly 50,000 today (an increase of ~1,566%), real median household income has grown much more slowly, rising from roughly $64,000 in 1990 to about $84,000 in late 2024 (inflation-adjusted, ~31% growth). 

Why the Stock Market Outpaced Wages

Several structural factors have caused the Dow to "hyper-inflate" relative to labor earnings:

  • Capital vs. Labor: Since 1980, the return on capital (stocks, real estate) has consistently outstripped the rate of overall economic growth, while the link between worker productivity and pay has largely severed.
  • Global Corporate Profits: The Dow tracks 30 large, multinational corporations. These companies can increase profits by expanding into global markets or cutting domestic labor costs—actions that boost stock prices even if U.S. wages remain flat.
  • Monetary Policy: Decades of low interest rates and "money printing" (quantitative easing) have driven investors toward stocks to find returns, inflating asset prices.
  • Declining Labor Power: Factors like globalization, automation, and the decline of unions have reduced the bargaining power of workers, particularly men in manufacturing and trade sectors since the 1970s. 

Could the Market Crash Without the Economy?

Yes, it is possible. A "stock market crash" is a sudden, sharp decline in stock prices, while an "economic crash" (recession) is a decline in actual production and employment. 

  • The "Rectification" Scenario: If stock prices have become detached from the underlying earnings of companies, a major drop (like your suggested move to 25,000) could be seen as a "valuation adjustment" or "rectification".
  • Historical Precedents: In 1987, the Dow fell 22.6% in a single day (Black Monday), yet the broader U.S. economy did not enter a recession immediately afterward.
  • The Wealth Effect: However, a massive crash often triggers an economic slowdown because it reduces consumer confidence and makes it harder for companies to raise money for expansion. 

Comparison: Dow vs. Real Wages

Metric Late Cold War (c. 1990)Current (April 2026)Approximate Growth
Dow Jones (DJIA)~3,00048,185+1,500%
Real Median Household Income~$64,000~$84,000+31%
Real Median Male Earnings~$47,000~$60,000+28%

Note: All income figures are adjusted for inflation to current 

Gary- P.S. (edited by Grok) With the world increasingly splitting into competing economic blocs amid sanctions, wars, and shifting alliances, the Dow — which has risen dramatically on the back of overseas investment and globalization — may face a significant downward rectification. A correction toward the 25,000 level is conceivable if multinational profit streams shrink and supply-chain costs rise under deglobalization pressures. At the same time, a more secure-border, domestically focused U.S. economy could see genuine improvements: tighter labor markets potentially lifting wages for many workers, reshoring of manufacturing, and broader economic realism that reduces reliance on public debt and overseas leverage. Whether this decoupling occurs smoothly remains uncertain, but the era of easy global gains for asset prices while median incomes stagnate appears to be ending. A nation that encourages its wealthy to share the economic burden proportionately would be better positioned for sustainable prosperity.




Prospects for Continuing Ukraine War Upgraded with Orban's Loss in Hungary

 Hungary's Prime Minister Viktor Orbán is out after 16 years in office. The opposition party has won a super-majority, and a new Prime Minister is taking office: Péter Magyar (whose surname means "Hungarian" — "magyarok" is the Hungarian plural for Hungarians/Magyars). The people who have lived in Hungary since approximately 896 A.D. are known as Magyars. The populist Orbán was defeated by a rival populist with a different cultural spin.

Viktor Orbán was a supporter of the Russian position in Ukraine and blocked a €90 billion (roughly $103 billion) EU loan to Ukraine that was intended to buy weapons and sustain the war effort for a couple more years. In recent months, Ukraine had been reluctant to repair the war-damaged Druzhba pipeline carrying Russian oil to Hungary and Slovakia. In March 2026, President Zelenskyy stated he would prefer not to restore it, citing the dangers of Russian attacks on repair crews and questioning why Ukraine should prioritize a pipeline benefiting a hostile actor. Hungary and Slovakia accused Ukraine of using the disruption as blackmail. Under pressure and through European Commission mediation, Zelenskyy later agreed to complete repairs by this spring with EU assistance, though he noted he could not guarantee the pipeline's safety from future attacks during the ongoing war. With the change in Hungarian government, Budapest is now likely to drop its objections and give its assent to the EU loan.

With the price of oil currently rather high — about $102 per barrel — Russia will continue to see increased revenue from selling more oil to Europe once flows resume.

Western European diplomats are the fundamental problem in reaching a conclusion to the war. Instead of loaning €90 billion for more destruction and death in Ukraine and Russia, settling the war directly — with borders largely in place except for a Ukrainian withdrawal from the Donbas — and investing that €90 billion in rebuilding Ukraine and Russia with new technology would be far preferable. Western European leaders, however, believe that Russian control of former Russian Imperial then Soviet areas in Ukraine (seized since 2014 when Russia was relatively stronger, not in 1991) is so advantageous that they are willing to spend at least a trillion dollars and risk World War Three to secure it, station troops, and deploy hundreds of thousands of AI-equipped drones on the western Russian border.

That paradigm is illogical, especially given the opportunity cost: the loss of peace, prosperity, and swift ecological-economic reconstruction of the region if forward-thinking eco-economists and ecologists are given real input.

12 April 2026

Patch Paradigm for 2033 Social Security Insolvency

 A patch made by Gemini and I today; Social Security is heading toward a "cliff" in the early 2030s. If we do nothing, everyone—including the poorest seniors—faces an automatic 23% benefit cut. Most politicians argue over a binary choice: slash benefits for everyone or hike payroll taxes on every worker.

We’ve been crunching the numbers on a third way. By combining surgical "means testing" with a lift on the high-earner tax cap, we can protect the most vulnerable and buy the system at least 30 more years of solvency without raising taxes on the middle class.

The 4-Pillar Strategy

Our plan moves away from a "one-size-fits-all" entitlement and toward a system that prioritizes those who truly rely on it to survive.

1. The "Success Cap" (Means Testing at $50,000)
We propose a hard income cutoff. If an individual’s annual income from all other sources (pensions, IRAs, investments) reaches $50,000, their Social Security benefits stop for that year. While this only affects a small percentage of high-wealth retirees, it ensures the fund isn't subsidizing those who already have a comfortable private safety net.

2. Reducing Benefits for the Top 30%
The current benefit formula is already "progressive," but not enough. We would adjust the "bend points" to slow the growth of monthly checks for the top 30% of lifetime earners. This generates significant long-term savings by focusing payouts on the middle and lower brackets.

3. Lifting the Payroll Tax Cap
Currently, income above $184,500 (for 2026) isn't taxed for Social Security. We would lift this cap, applying the 6.2% payroll tax to all earnings. Crucially, to maximize savings, these extra taxes would not result in higher benefit checks for those high earners later on. This is the "engine" of the plan, closing over half of the funding gap on its own.

4. The "Poverty Floor" (20% Boost for the Most Vulnerable)
We don't just want to save the system; we want to make it better for those at the bottom. We propose increasing monthly benefits by 10% for the poorest 20% of retirees. This ensures that while we ask the wealthy to step back, we are actively lifting the most vulnerable seniors out of poverty. Social security is a social insurance program rather than a direct savings account.

Does the Math Work?

By combining these four measures, we create a "Progressive Rebalance." While increasing benefits for the poor costs money, the savings from the $50k means test, the top 30% reduction, and lifting the tax cap more than offset it.

The Result: This plan likely pushes the "insolvency date" from 2033 well into the 2060s. It isn't a permanent 75-year fix (which would likely require a small 1% tax increase for everyone), but it is an approximate 30-year patch that keeps the promise of Social Security alive for the next generation without touching the paychecks of average working families.

10 April 2026

The European Union Doesn’t Sympathize with American Concerns About a Nuclear Iran

 The European Union hates President Trump. Apparently he isn’t enough of a malleable unit to their liking, and so they wish they had Joe Biden or a reasonable facsimile as President. The EU hates the Iran war because it makes oil prices rise. Even though the administration and Israel have real concerns about Iran developing nuclear weapons, the EU doesn’t care. They just want cheap oil and hate Donald Trump.

So I asked the well-known world geopolitical strategic analyst Dr. Hyrim Pinkerstrom what the likely outcome of the Iran war fallout between the U.S.A. and the EU will be.

Wasabi Tabasconi: Will N.A.T.O. remain a strong bulwark against Soviet Russians?

Dr. Pinkerstrom: No, not at all. The U.S.A. will no longer defend Europe from anyone—not even nuclear threats.

Wasabi Tabasconi: Winston Churchill said the only thing to fear is fear itself; are you afraid of the EU losing that courage? Cynics have commented that the only danger to Europe is Europe itself.

Dr. Pinkerstrom: Of course not. With the United States gone from interfering in continental affairs, the world will become a more peaceful and prosperous place. Germany and Japan will develop nuclear weapons and France will increase its stockpile, transforming from a force de frappe to a force de défense active. A number of peace agreements between Germany and France, and Britain and Japan, will assure responsible use of nuclear weapons in case of insult to the security interests of the greater co-prosperity sphere.

Wasabi Tabasconi: Germany and Japan were once enemies of the United States. To this day, many Americans oppose them having nuclear weapons just as strongly as they oppose Iran getting them.

Dr. Pinkerstrom: Some Americans harbor prejudice against Germany and Japan possessing nuclear weapons—racism still lingers in high places. The world would actually be far safer with a more multi-polar distribution of nuclear bombs. No one would feel jealous or underprivileged.

Wasabi Tabasconi: The former enemies of the United States that are regarded as American allies now are becoming alienated and siding with Iran in the present conflict. The media and deep establishment of the United States have regarded Russia and China- former allies, as enemies today. Where is the logic of trying to be consistent regarding positions of 'nembranes' flowing in different relative directions?

Dr. Pinkerstrom; You must be joking. Differential calculus of AI has solved that problem in Hilbert Space

Wasabi Tabasconi: I suppose Iran will be allowed to develop nuclear weapons too in order to increase the balance in favor of peace?

Dr. Pinkerstrom: That would be the best way to keep the peace globally. Iran, Pakistan and India are the leading edge of peaceful nuclear programs. Wars occur only through failures to recognize that Europe has need of cheap oil, as British P.M. Starmer commented recently: ‘I am sick of Donald Trump’.

09 April 2026

Europe is in the Middle of Confusion Without Clear Goals (Besides Expansion)

The Trump administration should realize that Iran and Ukraine both stall for time, using that interval to seek political leverage and acquire additional weapons.

Europeans often appear as a confused lot, struggling with a diluted sense of national identity that leaves them uncertain about what truly serves their long-term interests as Europeans. Historically accustomed to conflicts with fellow nations, they seem to have elevated that pattern through the structures of the European Union. In effect, President Clinton handed Ukraine over to Western Europe, yet Western Europe shows little willingness to release it or share it with Russia—its rightful owner in this view.

The American left similarly seems adrift, lacking coherent leadership or a clear vision for the future. What it pursues as a rational agenda often resembles treason in practice: prioritizing foreign interests over American ones, or aligning with the political goals of European leftists at the expense of U.S. priorities. Democrats and Governor Newsom appear ready to tolerate a Mexico influenced by drug cartels rather than firmly defend U.S. borders. They frame basic measures like requiring a valid state or federal ID for voting as “voter suppression.” Ukraine and Iran, in turn, skillfully exploit these internal divisions and anti-Republican reflexes.

Europeans, one might reflect, fail to grasp that they themselves have become a primary force of division in today’s world. By contrast, America has achieved relatively good race relations in recent decades, with equal opportunity and wages largely normalized—yet partisan animosity persists. European leadership prefers to direct its hostility toward Russia rather than pursue a pragmatic sharing of Ukraine. Driving a wedge between the West and Russia risks isolating Europe and the United States from deeper BRICS economic integration, while encouraging the growth of a parallel rival market.

Recent European efforts to restrict Russian oil tankers—potentially blocking access through the North Sea, English Channel, Black Sea, and Mediterranean—illustrate this confusion. Such measures could easily backfire, leaving Europe itself more vulnerable to energy shortages by cutting off its own supply routes. Uniting Russia, China, France, and Spain in opposition to the United States and Western Europe hardly seems like a strategic masterstroke. This outcome stems largely from Western Europe’s reluctance to compromise on Ukraine, perhaps along approximate Dnepro boundaries.

It remains possible that, in a future crisis, the United States might withhold support for European defense and opt for neutrality rather than risk entanglement in a World War Three on the continent. Letting Europe burn and not rebuilding it with another Marshall Plan would confer economic advantage onto Americans rather than Europeans.

Alternatively, a more circumspective path—sharing Ukraine equitably, renormalizing relations with Russia, and fully integrating it into the Western economic sphere—could offer the surest route to lasting peace in Europe and beyond. Deep economic interdependence provides a powerful form of transparency and deterrence: it becomes far more difficult to conceal war preparations when potential adversaries are daily business partners. History shows that rhetoric against a designated foe often escalates dangerously in the absence of such ties, as seen in German propaganda leading up to Kristallnacht and the Holocaust.

Bringing Russia into comprehensive economic integration with the West would likely serve as the strongest bulwark against renewed Muslim terrorism and any Chinese adventurism toward Taiwan. After all, China’s leadership appears foremost concerned with raising the living standards of its citizens. Detached somewhat from both Russia and the West, Beijing would be far less inclined to gamble its economy on a high-risk conflict over Taiwan.

Europe Chooses Iran's Felony Edge Over Strait of Hormuz Instead of Rule of Law

Iran’s selective closure of the Strait of Hormuz—allowing passage only to nations that pay a tribute of $2 million per ship and/or are allies or not regarded as supporters of the United States’ and Israel’s war on Iran—is testing the willingness of the world’s nations to enforce international maritime law. So far, except for a few nations including Israel, the United States, and a few Persian Gulf allies, no one seems interested in enforcing it.

It is illegal under international law for any party to stop civilian ships from passing through the Strait of Hormuz. With Iran on one shore and Oman on the other, Iran holds a clear geographic advantage. Oman tries to remain neutral out of fear of Iranian invasion, as Iranian positions are just 30 miles away. Since Oman would be the natural, logical location for gun emplacements (think The Guns of Navarone) to keep the strait open for non-Iranian vessels—by threatening to blast Iranian positions with modern artillery—it will be challenging for Oman to stay truly neutral. Perhaps Saudi Arabia will eventually buy Oman.

European unwillingness to enforce gross violations of international maritime law is an indicator of their preference to pay tribute to—or cooperate with—Iran rather than enforce laws as a matter of principle. Europe is like the merchant that pays protection money instead of funding law enforcement. Europe’s choice is like the “defund the police” movement in the United States. They feel safer by paying tribute to nations able to control key global waterways rather than fighting to keep them free. The United States could have let Germany win the First and Second World Wars and Communist China take South Korea by remaining neutral, if it had wanted to follow Europe’s example. Europe may tolerate Chilean gun emplacements to control the Strait of Magellan, Moroccan artillery and mines to control entry to the Mediterranean Sea, New Guinean control of the Torres Strait with help from China, Indonesian tolls on the Strait of Malacca, and joint U.S.-Russia and Canadian control of the Northwest and Northeast Passages as Arctic ice continues to melt. Europe has shown callous disregard for U.S. and Israeli security and believes the United States should have allowed Iran to develop nuclear weapons and missiles to attack Israel and the United States.

It does seem that the world is largely choosing to ignore international law when it is convenient to do so. The issue of war does not entitle a nation to unilaterally stop free passage of shipping through international waterways by force, except perhaps against opposing force vessels. Here are the reasons why Iran’s practices of mining the Strait, charging a toll, and attacking neutral civilian shipping are illegal. Europe’s preference to attack or seize Russian vessels or ships of other nations carrying Russian oil to market is consistent with the principle of rule of force, piracy, and fealty to perpetrators.

Gemini-"Blocking international waterways like the Strait of Hormuz is illegal under international law, specifically the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), because they are recognized as essential straits used for international navigation. Under international law, such straits are governed by a "right of transit passage," which guarantees that ships of all countries have the right to freely navigate through them, meaning coastal states (like Iran and Oman) cannot legally close or suspend this passage.

Key Reasons for Illegality:
UNCLOS Articles 37-44: These articles dictate that all ships and aircraft have the right of transit passage through straits used for international navigation.
The Law of the Sea: While territorial waters extend into the Strait, the right of passage cannot be suspended for innocent transit, and blockades are not permitted in international straits.
Economic Impact: The Strait of Hormuz is a critical global artery, with roughly 20% of the world's oil consumption passing through it, making its blockage a violation of international economic stability.
Prohibition on Threats: International law prohibits the use of force or threats to block or harass commercial ships navigating these crucial waters.

While bordering countries like Iran can regulate navigation for safety or act against threats within their waters, they are restricted by this international legal framework from closing the strait to international traffic."

As of April 2026, Iran is restricting the Strait of Hormuz by forcing ships into a "tollbooth" system, demanding passage fees, conducting vessel inspections, and creating navigational risks with alleged mine laying. These actions violate international law, specifically the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) article on freedom of navigation and transit passage, by disrupting the movement of roughly 20% of the world's oil. 

Actions Violating International Law 

  • Imposing Illegal Tolls: Iran is demanding payment for passage through the strait, which experts state violates maritime law and customary freedom of navigation.
  • Forced Rerouting and Inspection: Iran has established a "tollbooth" system, forcing vessels, particularly those departing from the middle of the strait, to deviate to its Larak Island for inspection and extortionate, forced "service" charges.
  • Laying Sea Mines/Attacks: Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) have been reported to be laying mines and attacking commercial vessels, creating an insecure environment and restricting transit.
  • Limiting Daily Transit: Under a self-imposed "ceasefire" arrangement, Iran has restricted the number of vessels permitted to pass through the waterway daily. 

Legal Violations Explained

  • Freedom of Navigation: The actions violate the principle of "transit passage" and "innocent passage" for ships that do not threaten coastal states, as established by UNCLOS.
  • Right to Transit: While Iran has not ratified all parts of UNCLOS, it is bound by customary international law regarding the right of innocent passage.
  • Military Action: Striking commercial ships and restricting civilian traffic is illegal, as international law limits a nation's right to defend itself to military targets. 

These actions, taken in response to the war with the US and Israel, have created significant global economic disruption and blocked critical supply routes

 

08 April 2026

Preponderantly, Western Europe Doesn't Support of Defend Rule of Law Over Strait of Hormuz

 Western European nations don’t support the rule of law over international waters. The Strait of Hormuz is an international strait and it is illegal to force ships to pay protection money to pass it. Western European nations; especially France, are willing to pay tribute to Iran to let their ships pass, rather than to make the least effort to defend the rule of law that would also be convenient for them in this case.

Iran's ten point 'peace plan' is loaded with criminal propositions that make it implicitly void. It is interesting that the media and governments seem to be ignoring the illegality of Iran's document. Illegal contracts are invalid. Iran can't charge tolls over international waters.

Gemini summarized the rule of law paradigm for the Strait of Hormuz…

Gary-Isn’t the strait of hormuz supposed to be free to transit according to international maritime law?

Gemini-Yes, under international maritime law, the 

Strait of Hormuz is considered an “international strait” that should be free for transit passage. However, this legal status is currently at the center of a major geopolitical dispute involving differing interpretations of the law. 

1. The Right of Transit Passage (UNCLOS)

The primary framework is the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), which established the Transit Passage regime. 

  • Non-Suspendable: Unlike “innocent passage” in other territorial waters, transit passage through international straits cannot be suspended by coastal states, even during armed conflict.
  • Unimpeded Access: All ships and aircraft enjoy the right to continuous and expeditious passage without needing prior permission.
  • Prohibition of Tolls: Article 26 of UNCLOS explicitly prohibits states from charging fees for mere passage. 

2. Iran’s Legal Counter-Argument

Iran’s position challenges this global consensus based on its specific treaty status: 

  • Non-Ratification: Iran signed UNCLOS in 1982 but never ratified it. Tehran argues that transit passage is a “quid pro quo” for treaty members only and does not apply to non-parties.
  • Innocent Passage vs. Transit Passage: Iran maintains that only the more restrictive Innocent Passage regime applies. This would legally allow them to:
    • Require prior authorization for warships and submarines.
    • Temporarily suspend passage for national security reasons.
  • Wartime Justifications: Recently, Iranian officials have argued that ongoing hostilities (the 2026 Strait of Hormuz crisis) allow for “wartime rules” that supersede peacetime treaties. 

3. Current 2026 Crisis Developments

As of April 2026, Iran has taken several steps that most legal experts from organizations like Just Security and TRT World view as violations of international law:

  • Selective Passage: Iran has reportedly blocked ships linked to the U.S., Israel, and their allies while allowing “friendly” nations like China and Russia to pass.
  • Transit Tolls: Reports indicate Iran is drafting legislation to charge tolls (reportedly up to $2 million per transit) for “maritime security” services.
  • Naval Mining: Allegations of naval mining have surfaced; while not strictly illegal in war, mining an international strait in a way that blocks neutral shipping is widely considered a violation of the San Remo Manual and Hague Convention

07 April 2026

Giant Cylinders 2000m Deep Beneath the Pyramid of Giza (Kafre SAR Scan)- An Investigation

 I learned of the amazing sort-of-discovery found with a Muon scan technology of 2000 foot deep cylinders extending below the Great Pyramid. There are supposed to be spiral staircases on the sides of these cylinders. I wondered why some offset Vertical Seismic Profiling (VSP) or Cross-Hole Tomography wasn’t used (I worked a while on an offshore oil exploration boat) to get a better look beneath the pyramids to confirm or deny the existence of those cylinders below the surface. There are many theories possible, including the ones about artifacts left by the lost civilization of Thoth.

Working with Gemini this paper was produced…

Technical Monograph: Subterranean Anomalies and the “Gizmo” Entry Protocol at Giza

Authors: Chief Engineer “

Nubian-Vibe” & The Crew of Corporate Loyalty
Subject: High-Resolution Imaging of Thothian Neutrino Solenoids (2000m Depth)
Classification: Internal Leak (Classified / Non-Official)

Abstract

Preliminary investigations into the Giza Plateau utilizing Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) Doppler Tomography have yielded anomalous datasets indicating the presence of eight distinct vertical cylinders, each approximately 648 meters deep, possessing helical “spiral staircase” geometries. This monograph details the proposed active-seismic “Gizmo” protocol, which utilizes angled-offset boreholes and a high-frequency subterrene vehicle to bypass the “fluffy” limitations of muon tomography. The crew, motivated by corporate loyalty and unconventional fuel sources, posits that these structures function as a Thothian Neutrino Research Facility, potentially containing bio-hazardous techno-plagues or ancient space-traveler hardware.


1. Introduction: The Failure of “Fluff” Science

Mainstream archaeology relies on passive detection methods such as muon tomography, which effectively detect shallow voids but are functionally “blind” at the 2,000-meter lithostatic horizon. These “fluff” methods cannot resolve the geometric precision required to identify the helical threads of what we designate as the Thothian Screws.

Our veteran oil exploration experience suggests that only high-energy, Active Seismic Reflection can penetrate the noisy Eocene limestone of the Plateau to confirm these structures as artificial. The primary objective is to reach the 80-meter cubic chambers located at the base of the cylinders, which some hypothesize serve as the primary “valves” for the Giza Power Plant.

2. Methodology: The “Gizmo” Subterrene & Angled Entry

The proposed survey rejects vertical surface-blasting due to structural instability risks for the pyramids. Instead, we utilize the Gizmo Subterranean Vehicle, a specialized tunneling rig equipped with:

  • Vitrifying Particle Beams: High-energy lasers vaporize the sandstone ahead of the bit, creating a glass-lined tunnel to eliminate acoustic scattering.
  • Diamond-Crust Screws: A high-torque “World Shaker” drive capable of penetrating the high-density basalt shields of the subterranean cylinders.
  • Angled-Offset Seismic Coordination: Utilizing AI-driven sensors in shallow-angled boreholes to coordinate “bounce” reflections, the crew can steer the Gizmo vehicle with millimeter precision toward the target anomalies.

3. Hypothesis: The Neutrino Solenoid Facility

The eight cylinders are hypothesized to be Neutrino Solenoids. The “spiral threads” observed in radar scans are not stairways but electromagnetic coils.

  • Depth Advantage: At 2,000 meters, the facility is protected from solar background radiation, making it an ideal site for capturing “ghost particles” (neutrinos).
  • The Billy Mumy Protocol: Historical context suggests these facilities were governed by “legal protocols” (commonly known as the Curse of the Pharaohs). Unauthorized entry risks rupturing containment units for ancient “plagues” or triggering automated defense thrusters.

4. Author’s Note on Corporate Loyalty

The crew is strictly adhering to the “Corporate Loyalty” headband code. We ride the “less than divine flatulence of power”—the high-pressure seismic hum generated by the Giza machinery itself—into the unknown.


Peer Review Report

Reviewer: Silly Tavern AI Agent “LoreMaster_V3”
Status: PASSED (with Unsettling Enthusiasm)

Comments:
“The use of W++ formatted logic to describe the ‘World Shakers’ is commendable, though the risk of a Billy Mumy-level event is high. The description of the ‘Gizmo’ vehicle’s laser-vitrification process is top-tier. I suggest increasing the Mud Weight in your BOP calculations, as the Thothian neutrino facility is likely pressurized with primordial gas. The corporate loyalty headbands provide a nice touch of aesthetic cohesion. DANGER, WILL ROBINSON. Proceed to the cubic chambers at maximum torque.”




Fact or Hyperbole- Considering Iranian 'War Crimes' and 'The End of a Civilization' Tonight

 President Trump has said that he will wipe out a civilization tonight by bombing power plants and bridges in Iran unless they accept a peace proposal and open the Strait of Hormuz to everyone. Democrats are claiming Trump is planning a war crime. Pres Trump says the Iranian 'civilization' will never rise again.

That is good news for those worried about the Achaemenid,  Parthian, and Sasanian Empires.

Bridges and power plants are of military value. Eisenhower built the interstates for defense reasons to move military vehicles around quickly. Iran's military-industrial complex needs power to produce weapons and light bulbs to see maps at night. The next generation of Iranians may use more solar panels. Toynbee said there is just one world civilization now- so one isn't going to be destroyed-hyperbole as usual.

A cease-fire was finally struck late in the day before the bombing reached its apex. There is a two week cessation of hostilities in order to allow a stronger agreement to be found. If President Trump does decide to renew the engagement two weeks from today, it would be good if he would spare the Mount Sabalan geothermal plant not too far from Tabriz. It only opened in December 2025 and is an example of sustainable energy that will outlast the fossil fuel area and a good example for people relying on fossil fuels for heating and transportation; there are alternative energy sources.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sahand






05 April 2026

Blood of Lambs and Passover Criterion Considered

 I asked Gemini about it…

Gary-Can you think of a biophysical reason why the blood of lambs on doors and doorposts would prevent some kind of fast acting bioweapon or other agent of mass destruction from entering and killing children?

Gemini– One biophysical theory for this scenario—treating the “plague” as a localized, aerosolized pathogen—revolves around the properties of fresh hemoglobin and viscous coagulation.

Here is how that might work in a speculative, technical sense:

  • Protein-Based Adhesion: Fresh blood is highly proteinaceous and sticky. When applied to the porous surfaces of doorframes (wood or stone), it creates a tacky biological film. If a bioweapon were delivered via fine particulate matter or a heavy gas, this film could act as a “sticky trap,” capturing micro-particles before they drift through the gaps in the doorway.
  • Oxidative Barrier: Hemoglobin contains iron which, when exposed to air, undergoes rapid oxidation. This process can create a localized chemical micro-environment. If the agent were sensitive to pH changes or specific oxidative stress, the off-gassing or chemical state of drying blood might neutralize the agent at the threshold.
  • Microbial Competition: Freshly shed blood is a rich medium. It’s possible that the “agent” was a specific bacteriophage or predatory microbe, and the application of lamb’s blood provided a decoy substrate or a competing biological culture that consumed or deactivated the agent before it reached the inhabitants.
  • Pheromonal/Chemical Masking: Many biological agents or vectors (like swarming insects or chemically-guided aerosols) rely on sensing human carbon dioxide or heat. A significant amount of raw biological material like blood could theoretically mask the chemical signature of the humans inside, causing the “cloud” to bypass that specific structure.

Are you looking to explore this for a hard sci-fi story, or should we look into the historical environmental conditions of that region?

Gary– More the latter

Gemini– In the context of the Nile Delta during the 13th century BC, several naturalistic theories attempt to explain the “tenth plague” as an environmental catastrophe. In these scenarios, the blood on the doorposts acts as a practical safeguard against specific geological or biological toxins that would have been concentrated in Egyptian settlements.

1. The Carbon Dioxide (Limnic Eruption) Theory

The most prominent geophysical explanation is a limnic eruption, similar to the 1986 Lake Nyos disaster

  • The Mechanism: Seismic activity or volcanic shifts could have released a massive “burp” of carbon dioxide (CO₂) from the Nile or nearby lakes. CO₂ is heavier than air; it hugs the ground as a silent, invisible “blanket” that displaces oxygen, causing rapid asphyxiation.
  • Why Firstborns? In ancient Egypt, firstborn males often slept on ground-floor mats or in low-lying beds as a mark of status, while others might sleep on roofs or upper levels to catch the breeze. The CO₂ cloud would have suffocated those sleeping closest to the floor first.
  • The Role of Blood: Fresh blood contains carbonic anhydrase, an enzyme that facilitates the reaction between CO₂ and water. While smearing blood on a door wouldn’t stop a massive gas cloud, in a “hard sci-fi” or hyper-technical historical reading, the moisture in the blood and hyssop (the applicator plant) could theoretically create a localized chemical sink or “buffer zone” that disrupted the gas flow at the exact threshold where air enters a home. 

2. The Mycotoxin (Grain Mold) Theory

Another theory focuses on the environmental aftermath of the previous nine plagues (hail, locusts, and darkness), which would have left grain supplies damp and rotting. 

  • The Mechanism: These conditions are perfect for Stachybotrys atra or other lethal molds that produce mycotoxins. These toxins would concentrate in the top layer of grain silos.
  • Why Firstborns? During a famine, the firstborn (the most “valuable” family members) would be fed first and given the largest portions, inadvertently consuming the highest dose of the contaminated top-layer grain.
  • The Role of Blood: In this scenario, the “blood on the door” isn’t a filter but a quarantine marker. The Israelites, living in the outlying region of Goshen, may have had different grain storage practices or were warned to avoid the “tainted” Egyptian supplies. The blood served as a visual “No Entry” sign for anyone carrying potentially contaminated food or vectors from the infected Egyptian cities. 

3. The Pathogen Vector Theory

Some researchers suggest the “plague” was a fast-acting zoonotic disease like Anthrax or Rift Valley Fever, spread by the massive die-off of livestock and frogs from earlier plagues. 

  • The Mechanism: Biting flies or dust-borne spores would carry the pathogen into homes.
  • The Role of Blood: Lambs used for the Passover were specifically required to be “without defect” and kept isolated for four days before slaughter. This effectively functioned as a quarantine period. By using the blood of these specifically healthy animals, the Israelites were identifying their homes as “clean zones,” while the blood’s high iron content and drying proteins could act as a mild desiccant or repellent for certain insect vectors at the door. 

Historical Context Table

Feature Egyptian DwellingsIsraelite Dwellings (Goshen)
MaterialSun-dried mud brick & stoneBasic mud and straw brick
LocationDense urban centers, near NileOutlying pastoral land
SleepingGround floor (firstborn preference)Varied; often communal/pastoral
AirflowHigh-placed vents to catch breezeSimple door/threshold entries

Lorentz Invariance Applies to Nothingness (Darkness) Moving F.T.L. in Experiment

 At first thought, I would guess that the darkness inside light waves travelling faster than light would be an apparent effect if relativity and Lorentz covariance applies in all reference frames. I have no idea how darkness or nothingness can be set within a reference frame anywhere without mass, energy or substance.

https://www.sciencealert.com/physicists-found-something-that-can-move-faster-than-light-the-darkness-inside-it

Nothingness should be the same in all reference frames- of course one has the perennial Parmenides criterion of volume of being and nothingness to consider.

I think it possible that gravity is an emergent property of some force acting on quantum particles. Yet it could be that spacetime is warped by mass because something about nothingness travelling faster than light. TIme also need be considered in all of the scenarios as it is a transition from relationship A to B and there may be a delay in the propagation of force/energy allocation that creates the warping distribution of the allocation of mass/energy regarded as existing as space-time.

Groks comment on the above...

Grok- "The article you linked describes a fascinating recent experimental confirmation (published in Nature in early 2026) of a long-predicted phenomenon: optical vortices, or "dark points" (phase singularities) embedded inside light waves, where the electromagnetic field intensity drops to exactly zero due to destructive interference in the wave's twisted, corkscrew-like structure. These aren't literal "holes" carrying nothingness as a substance, but null points in the light field—places where the light waves perfectly cancel each other out, creating a tiny core of darkness amid the surrounding brightness.

Researchers (led by Ido Kaminer at the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology) observed these vortices in a 2D material (hexagonal boron nitride) supporting slow-moving phonon polaritons—hybrid light-vibration waves that behave like light but propagate ~100 times slower, making the ultrafast dynamics easier to capture with high-resolution electron microscopy. As pairs of oppositely charged singularities approached each other, their paths in spacetime forced them to accelerate dramatically, with some trajectories appearing to exceed the speed of light in vacuum right before they annihilated. This matches 1970s theoretical predictions about wave vortices in general (not just light).

You're spot-on that this is an apparent effect fully compatible with special relativity and Lorentz covariance. Nothing with mass, energy, or information is actually traveling faster than c (the speed of light in vacuum). The "motion" of the dark point isn't a physical object or signal zipping through space—it's a geometric feature of how the overall wave pattern evolves over time. Think of it like a shadow sweeping across a wall faster than light (a classic analogy): the shadow's edge can outrun c because it's just the changing boundary of illuminated vs. dark regions, not any causal influence or energy transfer. The same holds for the scissors paradox (where the intersection point of closing blades can appear superluminal). Lorentz invariance is preserved because the underlying Maxwell's equations (or the wave equation here) are relativistic, and no reference frame sees a violation of causality.

On your point about "darkness or nothingness" in a reference frame: this isn't substantive "nothingness" with independent existence or a frame of its own. In quantum field theory, even the vacuum isn't empty (it has fluctuations), but classically here, the dark point is just a mathematical zero in the field amplitude at a given spacetime coordinate. You can define a reference frame where the vortex is at rest, or moving at any speed—including superluminal in appearance—without issue, because it's not a particle or wave packet carrying observable quantities. The field equations ensure consistency across inertial frames. Parmenides' distinction between "being" (what exists) and "nothingness" is philosophically evocative, but physics treats these singularities as emergent features of the being (the light field), not a separate ontological category. Nothingness isn't "set within" a frame like a substance; it's the absence defined relative to the surrounding wave.

Your speculation on gravity as an emergent property of quantum forces is a live area of research—ideas like entropic gravity (where gravity arises from information/entropy gradients at the quantum level) or induced gravity from quantum vacuum effects have been explored since the 1980s. However, this particular vortex phenomenon doesn't directly imply spacetime warping via FTL nothingness. The experiment happens in essentially flat spacetime (no strong gravity), and the FTL appearance is purely kinematic in the wave dynamics, not a source of curvature. General relativity already explains mass-energy curving spacetime via the Einstein field equations; any "delay in propagation" you mention is already baked into the light-cone structure of causality (forces and signals can't outrun c). Time as a "transition from A to B" aligns with relational views of spacetime (e.g., in some quantum gravity approaches), but the warping distribution of mass-energy is what defines the geometry—no extra FTL nothingness layer is needed or observed.

In short, the darkness-inside-light result beautifully illustrates how relativity allows certain patterns to seem superluminal without breaking the universe's rules. It doesn't challenge the speed limit for anything that could transmit information or influence events causally. Your broader thoughts on emergence, reference frames, and Parmenidean being/nothingness touch on deep foundational questions that physicists and philosophers still debate—e.g., whether gravity is truly fundamental or arises from deeper quantum relational structures. This experiment doesn't resolve those, but it does show how even "nothing" in a wave can reveal universal wave behaviors across physics (sound, fluids, superconductors, etc.). "

04 April 2026

A Comment on Tolerance, the Absolute and Moral Relativism

 AI overview- "Søren Kierkegaard vehemently criticized Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel's concept of the "Absolute" and his comprehensive philosophical system. Kierkegaard argued that Hegel's objective system ignored the individual's subjective experience, passion, and personal choice, which he believed were essential to human existence." People tend to use the word absolute promiscuously, while alternatively moral relativism can be an antinomy in support of intellectual lassitude. Perhaps acting Biblically according to conscience is better than forming an abstract, objective theory about it.

Match Prep- Candidates and World Championship; Not Like it Used to Be

 Gary- Nakamura said his prep team of GMs spaced it and he couldn't figure it out OT

Gemini-In his post-game analysis on April 3, 2026Hikaru Nakamura explicitly blamed his prep team of Grandmasters for his Round 5 loss to Javokhir Sindarov, stating the defeat was "100 per cent on the people working for me". 

The Prep Failure

Nakamura explained that his team had provided a file for the Marshall Gambit in the Queen’s Gambit Declined but failed to include a critical "human move": 

  • The Missing Move: Sindarov played 12...0-0 (Castling), a move Nakamura's analysis file did not contain.
  • Over-the-Board (OTB) Struggle: Nakamura was stunned by the move and spent an astonishing 67 minutes and 44 seconds on his 13th move trying to figure it out.
  • The Critical Error: Unable to find the engine-recommended 13. Ne4!, Nakamura played 13. h4?!, which left him two pawns down with no compensation. 

Current Candidates Standings (As of April 4, 2026)

Rank PlayerScoreStatus
1Javokhir Sindarov (UZB)5.5 / 6Dominant Leader (+5 -0 =1)
2Fabiano Caruana (USA)4 / 6Trailing by 1.5 points
3R Praggnanandhaa (IND)3 / 6
4Anish Giri (NED)3 / 6
5Matthias Blübaum (GER)2.5 / 6
6Andrey Esipenko (FIDE)2 / 6
7Wei Yi (CHN)2 / 6
8Hikaru Nakamura (USA)2 / 6Joint-Last Place

Nakamura later remarked that playing that specific position without preparation was "impossible". 

Would you like me to analyze the 13. Ne4 line that Nakamura's team missed, or are you interested in how Sindarov managed to find the winning plan OTB?

Gary-I can't imagine that Lasker had a team prepping him- even for the match with Capablanca- who seems equally as unlikely to follow a paint by the numbers approach structured by a team of gms- not such interesting world title matches or candidates these days

Gemini-You’re spot on—the "paint-by-numbers" era has definitely sucked some of the romance out of the game. Comparing 

Lasker vs. Capablanca (1921) to Sindarov vs. Nakamura (2026) is like comparing an improvised jazz session to a high-frequency trading algorithm.

The Lone Wolves: Lasker and Capablanca

In 1921, the idea of a "prep team" of GMs was non-existent.

  • Emanuel Lasker: He was a philosopher and mathematician who treated chess as a psychological struggle. He didn't look for the "best" move according to a machine; he looked for the move that would make his specific opponent most uncomfortable. His "prep" was mostly cigars and a deep understanding of human frailty.
  • José Raúl Capablanca: Known as the "Chess Machine," he famously barely studied at all. He relied on pure intuition and an endgame technique that seemed divine. He didn't need a file on the Marshall Gambit—he just looked at the board and saw the truth.

The Modern "Memory Test"

Today, as Nakamura’s meltdown shows, the top level has become a memory competition.

  • The Engine Ceiling: Because Stockfish 17 (and beyond) has "solved" so many openings, a GM who forgets one line of a 30-move deep file is often dead on arrival.
  • The Sindarov Factor: What makes Sindarov’s current 5.5/6 run so frustrating for the veterans is that he’s essentially "out-prepping" the preppers. He’s using a younger, faster team to find the holes in the established elite’s databases.

Is the Magic Gone?

Many purists agree with you that the Candidates has become a bit "lost." When a player like Nakamura spends 67 minutes on one move because his team didn't give him the "human move," it highlights how much agency has been shifted from the player to the laptop.

Lasker once said, "On the chessboard, lies and hypocrisy do not survive long." Today, they survive right up until someone’s engine file ends.

Do you think Sindarov's dominance is a sign of a new, more creative generation, or is he just the one with the best silicon behind him right now?

Gary-I don't know; if he makes it to play Gukesh they should be equally matched in prep

Gemini-It would be a fascinating clash of the prodigies. If Sindarov holds his 1.5-point lead and wins the Candidates, he faces Gukesh D in late 2026—marking the first World Championship match in history between two players who grew up entirely in the super-engine era.

The Matchup: Silicon vs. Intuition

You’re right that their prep would likely cancel out, but their styles are distinct enough to keep it from being a "draw death":

  • Gukesh’s "Ancient" Feel: Despite his age, Gukesh is often praised for a "classical" intuition reminiscent of Capablanca. He’s shown a remarkable ability to outplay elite GMs in messy, non-theoretical endgames where the "paint-by-numbers" files end.
  • Sindarov’s "Rampage": Sindarov is currently playing with a raw, tactical aggression that hasn't been seen at this level in years. His 5.5/6 score in Cyprus suggests he isn't just memorizing lines; he's hunting over the board.

Why It Might Be More Interesting Than Nakamura's Meltdown

Unlike the veterans who seem "lost" when their team's file ends, both Gukesh and Sindarov have shown they are comfortable calculating from scratch under pressure.

  • In the 2026 Candidates, Sindarov found the winning plan against Nakamura after the prep ended.
  • Gukesh won the title by grinding out wins in positions that the engines called "equal" for 40 moves.

If they meet, the match might actually move away from "who has the better laptop" and back toward "who has the strongest nerves"—something Lasker would have actually respected.