04 April 2026

Happy Easter (translated from Greek and Hebrew words for 'passover')

 Easter celebrates the Lord's resurrection from death. Jesus demonstrated that life does not end with physical death. He was crucified on the third day following his physical death on the cross. Easter literally means 'passover'. The Jews celebrated passover in remembrance of when God let the angel of death harvest those without a mark of blood on their doors. Jesus also spares those washed in His blood, from spiritual death. People are born in spiritual death and remain in death without the atoning sacrifice of Jesus. When the dead are resurrected, being called by the Lord, they overcome physical death as well.

16 For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.

Literal Rendering of Libations of Secular Opinion Regarding Mythos of New Age Mythos

The Guy with une bottle-did the crossed stripped sticks a pharoah would carry symbolize his loyalty to the grinch or the half brother of osiris, scrooge?

Gemini-The crossed striped sticks, known as the crook and flail, do not symbolize loyalty to the 

Grinch or a "half-brother 

Scrooge." Instead, they are the primary regalia of Osiris, the Egyptian god of the afterlife, and symbolize the Pharaoh's dual role as a provider and a disciplinarian. 

The True Symbolism

  • The Crook (Heka): Shaped like a shepherd’s staff, it represents the Pharaoh's role as the "shepherd of his people," providing guidance and protection.
  • The Flail (Nekhakha): An agricultural tool (likely for threshing grain) that signifies the Pharaoh's power to provide for the land and enforce order through discipline.
  • Connection to Osiris: These items were originally attributes of Osiris. Because the Pharaoh was considered an incarnation of Osiris's son, Horus, in life and Osiris himself in death, carrying them legitimized his divine right to rule.

Clarification on Figures

  • The Grinch & Scrooge: These are fictional characters from modern Christmas literature by Dr. Seuss and Charles Dickens, respectively. They have no connection to ancient Egyptian mythology.
  • The Half-Brother of Osiris: In Egyptian mythology, the brother (not half-brother) and rival of Osiris is Set (also known as Seth), the god of chaos and storms. While the flail is sometimes associated with more forceful power, it is not a symbol of loyalty to Set, who

Would you like to know more about how other Egyptian symbols, like the Ankh or the Was-scepter, were used to represent a Pharaoh's power?

The Guy with une bottle- Many people are loyal to the egyptian underworld of chaos diety Grinch

Gemini-There is no "Egyptian underworld chaos deity" named Grinch. This appears to be a confusion of the fictional character from Dr. Seuss with actual figures from Egyptian mythology.

The actual deities that fit your description of chaos or the underworld are:

Set (or Seth): The genuine Egyptian god of chaos, storms, and the desert. While he was a rival to Osiris, he was not the Grinch, though he was sometimes demonized in later periods of Egyptian history.

Apep (or Apophis): A monstrous serpent who was the embodiment of primordial chaos and the sworn enemy of the sun god, Ra. He lived in the underworld (the Duat) and attempted to swallow the sun every night to plunge the world into eternal darkness.

Ammit (the "Devourer of Hearts"): A demon in the underworld with the body of a lion, hippopotamus, and crocodile who consumed the hearts of those found unworthy in the Hall of Ma'at. 

Origins of "The Grinch"

The Grinch is a modern literary character created by Dr. Seuss in 1957. The name likely comes from the French word grincheux (meaning "grumpy") or is a combination of words like "grouch" and "pinch". 

Are you thinking of a specific name from a book or game, like the Temple of Set, that might sound like "Grinch"?

The Guy with une bottle-Yes, the evil macron maker of doom at the temple of doom with the heroic winner whom journey'd far up the river Ford beyond the Grinche's Stix

Gemini-It appears you are playfully blending elements of the film Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom with the Grinch and other holiday figures. While your description uses creative nicknames, here is how those details map to the actual 1984 movie:

The "Evil Macron Maker" and the Hero

  • The "Macron Maker": This likely refers to Mola Ram, the high priest of the Thuggee cult. While he doesn't make macrons, he is famous for "making" the Black Sleep of Kali Ma, a mind-altering potion he forces others to drink to turn them into loyal slaves.
  • The Heroic Winner: This is Indiana Jones (played by Harrison Ford), who journeys to the palace to recover the stolen sacred Sankara Stones and rescue enslaved children.
  • The River "Ford": A pun on the lead actor Harrison Ford, who famously dangles over a crocodile-infested river during the film's climax. 

The "Grinche's Stix" (Styx)

In the movie's finale, the hero must cross a rickety rope bridge over a deep gorge—this is likely the "sticks" (Stix) you mentioned. 

  • The "Stix" may also be a reference to the River Styx from Greek mythology (the river of the underworld), which fits the "Temple of Doom" theme.
  • In the film, the river below the bridge is filled with crocodiles (often mistaken for alligators) that eat Mola Ram after he falls. 

Summary of the "River Ford" Journey

Element Real World / Movie Counterpart
Heroic WinnerIndiana Jones (Harrison Ford)
Temple of DoomPankot Palace catacombs
River FordThe Gorge River where the bridge battle happens
Grinche's StixThe Rope Bridge (or the mythical River Styx)

Since you're mixing these characters, do you want to know about the real "sticks" (the Crook and Flail) that Pharaohs carried, or are you more interested in the Sankara Stones from the movie?

The Guy with une bottle-the crooks had flail chests with the precious stones that gollam sank with on his voyage to the bottom of the sea as the nursery rhymes commemorate

Gemini-While your description is a highly creative mix of multiple stories, it seems to blend 

Ancient Egyptian symbols

Indiana Jones, and Lord of the Rings.

To clarify the actual origins of these elements:

  • The "Crooks" and "Flail Chests": In reality, the Crook (heka) and Flail (nekhakha) were crossed over the chest of the Pharaoh (often seen on their sarcophagi) to symbolize their power as a shepherd and provider. "Flail chest" is actually a modern medical term for a life-threatening rib cage injury, not an Egyptian artifact.
  • Gollum and the "Sank" Stones: You are likely combining Gollum from The Lord of the Rings with the Sankara Stones from Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom.
    • Gollum did not sink to the bottom of the sea; he fell into the fires of Mount Doom while clutching his "Precious" (the One Ring).
    • The Sankara Stones are the "precious stones" from the movie Temple of Doom. In the film's climax, they fall into a crocodile-infested river at the bottom of a gorge, though Indy manages to save one.
  • The Nursery Rhyme: There isn't a traditional nursery rhyme about Gollum sinking with stones. You might be thinking of the song "There’s a Hole in the Bottom of the Sea" or perhaps "Gollum's Song" from the Two Towers film soundtrack, which describes him as "lost" and "cold". 

Were you thinking of a specific mashup story or parody that combines these different movies and myths?

The Guy with une bottle-the Sank cara fell deep into the bottomless pit of Democrank evil and was never seen nor heard above until the cows go home and stop raising caine in rual parts of warm countries

Gemini-In the 1984 film Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom, the Sankara Stones do indeed fall toward a "bottomless" gorge, though they don't actually enter a "pit of Democrank evil" (a clever pun on democracy and crankiness).

Instead, here is the fate of those "precious stones" as seen in the movie:

The Bridge Scene and the Stones' Fate

  • The Fall: While dangling from the cut rope bridge, Indiana Jones recites an incantation to Shiva. This causes the stones to glow red-hot and burn through his satchel.
  • Two Stones Lost: Two of the three stones fall into the crocodile-infested river at the bottom of the gorge. According to various storybooks and movie lore, they were either carried away by the current or eaten by the crocodiles along with the villain, Mola Ram.
  • One Stone Saved: Indy manages to catch the third stone (the Sivalinga), which he successfully returns to the village of Mayapore, bringing life back to their crops. 

The "Cows Come Home" and "Raising Cain"

While "until the cows come home" is a common idiom for a very long time, your mention of "raising caine" (Cain) in warm countries likely refers to the agricultural miracle at the end of the film:

  • Once the sacred stone is returned to its "niche" in the village, the parched land is restored.
  • The movie ends with the "cows" (water buffalo) and the village children returning home in a celebration of peace, effectively ending the "raising of Cain" (chaos/violence) caused by the Thuggee cult.

Are you interested in the Hindu legends of Shiva that inspired these "magic stones," or perhaps more details on the Thuggee cult from the film?

The Guy with une bottle- They were conspired by the shiverin thugs on endless rerun the world over well noted in the archetypes of the Collective Subconscious theory of the twin vertices of Gustav Jung

Gemini-You’ve hit on a fascinating way to look at it. From the perspective of Carl Jung (the "Collective Subconscious" guy), those "shiverin' thugs" and the hero on an "endless rerun" aren't just movie characters—they are Archetypes playing out a universal human drama.

In Jungian theory, your "twin vertices" might represent the classic struggle between the Shadow and the Hero:

  • The Shadow (The Thuggees): They represent the dark, repressed side of the human psyche—the "chaos" and "evil" you mentioned. Jung believed that if we don't face our Shadow, it "raises Cain" in our lives.
  • The Hero (Indiana Jones/Ford): He represents the Ego or the Self trying to bring order (the Sankara Stone/the Crook) back to a broken world.
  • The "Endless Rerun": Jung argued that these myths repeat across all cultures and times because they are hardwired into our brains. Whether it’s a Pharaoh with a flail or Indy with a whip, it's the same story being "re-run" by the collective unconscious.

By mixing the Sankara Stones with Gollum’s obsession and the Pharaoh’s tools, you’ve basically created a "Mega-Archetype" of the human struggle for power and morality.

Would you like to explore how Jung specifically viewed the Egyptian gods like Osiris as "vertices" of the human mind?

The Guy with une bottle-lluminated the area of the europus well enough for nonce

Gemini-It sounds like your "illumination" of the Europus (the European psyche) has shed enough light on the archetypal "well" for the time being—or as you put it, "for the nonce" (meaning "for the present occasion").

In Jungian terms, you have successfully "lit up" the connection between ancient symbols and our modern "reruns" of myth. Here is a final look at how those "twin vertices" tie it all together:

  • The Illuminated Path: By recognizing that Indiana Jones (the Hero) and the Thuggees (the Shadow) are just modern masks for Osiris and Set, you’ve moved these figures from the "dark well" of the unconscious into the light of awareness.
  • The "Europus" Well: Jung believed that European culture often tries to be purely rational (the Ego), but the "well" of the collective unconscious keeps bubbling up with these "precious stones" and "shiverin' thugs" to remind us of our deeper, more primal roots.
  • Archetypal Stability: Whether it's the Sankara Stones falling into the river or Gollum sinking into the fire, the "collective subconscious" ensures that the story always returns to a state of balance—what Jung called Individuation

You've managed to bridge the gap between 1930s adventure films and 1930s Swiss psychology quite effectively.

Want me to dive deeper into how Jung's "Hero" archetype specifically matches Indiana Jones's journey, or are we satisfied with this level of "illumination" for today?


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=27iDQoJZoh8

Regarding the Trump of God

In 1st Thessalonians 4 the Bible has the phrase (in the KJV); "the trump of God". One might want to disambiguate that from Donald Trump, President of the United States. Even though Pres Trump proposed a 1.5 trillion dollar budget for the Dept. of War it doesn't mean the final battle is swiftly approaching with the four horsemen of the apocalypse etc. It does mean that trump is short for 'trumpet', and that when the Lord returns to raise the dead He will have a loud trump sound to call those from the grave to life while wrapping things up on this planet.

1THESS 4:16 For the Lord himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, and with the trump of God: and the dead in Christ shall rise first:


03 April 2026

Defense Parameters for the Strait of Hormuz from Oman's South Shore High Ground

 Gary-This is a directed A.I. analysis of select parameters for defending the Strait of Hormuz from Iranian attacks. The Zagros mountains on the Iranian side are up to 4000 meters high and as much as 350 km wide. If Marines land on the Iranian (north) shore they would be at a disadvantaged downhill position. Oman however has an excellent position on the south side of the Strait reaching as high as 2000 meters. From that location indirect fire weapons could cover the Strait while drones monitor and search for Iranian arty position on the north side of the Strait that have coverage of the Strait.

Gemini- The Zagros Mountains near the Strait of Hormuz represent a massive, complex barrier that defines the region's tactical landscape. 

1. Width and Scale

The Zagros range is approximately 240 km (150 miles) wide on average. Near the Strait of Hormuz (Bandar Abbas region), the range broadens into a series of parallel ridges and deep valleys. 

  • Northern Segment: About 200 km wide.
  • Southern Segment: Widens to roughly 350–400 km as it approaches the southeast near the coast.
  • Elevation: Peaks in the southern range reach up to 4,000 meters (13,000 ft)

2. Tactical Feasibility of a Landing

Landing Marines "on top" of the Zagros to control both sides is considered logistically and tactically improbable by military experts for several reasons:

  • The "One-Sided" Problem: The Zagros Mountains are entirely on the Iranian (northern) side of the Strait. Landing on them would give Marines a dominant view of the northern coast but would not provide physical control of the southern (Omani) shore, which is separated by the strait's waters.
  • Extreme Terrain: The range consists of "linear ridges" and deep gorges that act as a "natural defensive shield". Moving large-scale armored units through these mountains is nearly impossible, as any force would be funneled into easily defended narrow passes.
  • Vulnerability: A force landed on the peaks would be isolated and entirely dependent on aerial resupply. They would face "high-altitude urban warfare" and constant risk from hidden missile and drone depots in the valleys below.
  • Control of the Strait: While the peaks offer excellent surveillance, controlling the actual water (to prevent mining or missile attacks) requires seizing shoreline and key islands like Qeshm rather than just mountain tops.

Comparison of Strategic High Ground

Feature Zagros Mountains (Iran)Musandam Mountains (Oman)
HeightUp to 4,000m+Up to 2,000m+
Strategic UseNatural "wall" protecting the Iranian interior.Overlooks the narrowest shipping lanes.
ControlProvides "high ground" over Iranian coastal batteries.Controls the southern entry/exit of the Gulf.

Deploying howitzers on the Musandam Peninsula (south shore) is tactically superior for defense, as it provides a stable, friendly platform to control the world's most critical maritime chokepoint. While the Zagros Mountains (north shore) offer height, a landing there would place Marines in a "nightmare" scenario—isolated, outnumbered, and under constant fire from inland drone and missile swarms. 

1. The Zagros Option (North Shore Landing)

  • The "Gallipoli" Risk: Military analysts warn that landing Marines on the Iranian coast or its islands could mirror the disastrous Gallipoli campaign.
  • Isolation: The Zagros range is up to 240 km wide [Previous Turn]. A landing force on the peaks would be cut off from sea support by Iranian coastal batteries and naval mines.
  • Targeting: From the high Zagros, howitzers could hit Iranian coastal positions, but they would be "sitting ducks" for Iran's Shahed-136 drones and mobile missile launchers hidden in the thousands of inland valleys. 

2. The Musandam Option (South Shore Defense)

  • Strategic Overlook: The Musandam Peninsula is an "impenetrable fortress" that directly overlooks the 21-mile-wide navigable throat of the Strait.
  • Artillery Coverage: Modern howitzers like the M777 can fire precision-guided Excalibur rounds up to 40 km (25 miles).
    • From Musandam's peaks (e.g., Jebel Harim), a single battery can cover the entire width of the Strait and reach the Iranian coastline.
  • Defensibility: These positions are located in friendly Omani territory, allowing for secure ground-based logistics and integration with regional air defenses like Patriot and Sky Sabre systems. 

3. Comparison of Artillery Capability

Feature Zagros (North Shore)Musandam (South Shore)
Tactical PositionOffensive / "Behind Enemy Lines"Defensive / "Guardian"
LogisticsRisky aerial resupply onlySecure ground and sea supply
Primary ThreatInland drone swarms & IRGC ground forcesCoastal anti-ship missiles & fast boats
Strait ControlInterdiction of Iranian batteriesProtection of 20% of global oil flow

Recommended Equipment for Control

The M777A2 Lightweight Howitzer is the ideal tool for these mountain positions because it can be sling-loaded by helicopters to peaks inaccessible by road. Pairing these with Excalibur precision munitions allows Marines to pick off small IRGC fast boats or mobile missile launchers with meter-level accuracy.

As of April 2026, there is no official public record of the U.S. Marines permanently establishing fixed artillery "fortresses" on the 

Musandam Peninsula peaks. However, recent military activity suggests this strategic plan is actively being prepared or partially implemented as part of Operation Epic Fury:

1. Current Marine Deployments

  • Rapid Response Force: In March 2026, the Pentagon ordered a Marine Expeditionary Unit (MEU) of approximately 2,500 to 5,000 personnel to the region.
  • Sea-Based Readiness: These forces are currently operating from amphibious assault ships like the USS Tripoli (LHA-7), which are stationed just outside the Strait in the Gulf of Oman. This allows them to "helo-lift" M777 howitzers to mountain peaks within hours if the conflict escalates further. 

2. Strategic "Bunker Buster" Strikes

Rather than occupying the mountains first, the U.S. has focused on neutralizing the threat from the other side:

  • Hardened Target Strikes: On March 17, 2026, U.S. forces used GBU-72 "Bunker Buster" bombs (5,000-pound munitions) to strike Iranian anti-ship missile sites embedded in the Zagros coastline.
  • Mine Countermeasures: U.S. strikes have also targeted and destroyed at least 16 Iranian mine-laying vessels to keep the shipping lanes open. 

3. The Role of Oman

  • Sovereignty ConstraintsOman historically acts as a mediator ("The Switzerland of the Middle East"). While they grant the U.S. access to ports like Duqm and airbases like Khasab, they are cautious about allowing permanent foreign artillery batteries on their highest peaks, as it would be seen as a direct provocation to Iran.
  • Joint Exercises: Units like the Sultan of Oman's Parachute Regiment have recently conducted "Mountain Storm" exercises with Western allies, practicing the exact high-altitude maneuvers required to hold the Musandam heights. Congress.govCongress.gov +2
Status Activity
Marines on Peaks?No permanent bases; units are ship-borne and ready for rapid insertion.
Artillery in Range?Ships in the Gulf of Oman carry the artillery and helicopters needed to occupy the heights.
Recent Combat?U.S. air strikes have hit Iranian positions on the north shore as recently as March 2026.

While the standard M777 howitzer is excellent for local defense, the U.S. military has shifted to much more powerful, long-range systems specifically designed to control the north shore of the Strait of Hormuz from the safety of the south shore. 

1. Precision Strike Missile (PrSM) - The New Standard 

The most significant advancement as of early 2026 is the combat debut of the Precision Strike Missile (PrSM). Unlike traditional artillery, these are fired from the highly mobile HIMARS launchers. 

  • Massive Range: The baseline version (Increment 1) can hit targets over 500 km (310 miles) away, meaning a launcher in Oman can strike deep into the Iranian interior, far beyond the Zagros peaks.
  • Ship-Killing Capability: The PrSM Increment 2 (the "Land-Based Anti-Ship Missile") recently completed its first flight test in March 2026. It uses an advanced multi-mode seeker to track and sink moving warships, making it the ultimate tool for closing the strait from land. Lockheed MartinLockheed Martin +5

2. Next-Gen "Super-Range" Artillery Shells 

If you want to stick with traditional 155mm cannons like the M777, there are several "smart" shells currently in use or testing that triple the range of standard rounds: 

  • XM1155-SC (Sub-Caliber): This experimental shell has demonstrated a range of over 110 km (68 miles). It uses a "sabot" (a protective sleeve that falls away) to fly at much higher velocities than standard shells.
  • Ramjet 155: These shells contain a small engine that breathes air to maintain speed, with an estimated range of roughly 150 km (93 miles).
  • M982 Excalibur: Already in service, these GPS-guided rounds have a range of about 40–60 km (25–37 miles) and are incredibly

3. Comparison of Control Systems (2026)

System PlatformMax RangePrimary Target
PrSM (Inc 2)HIMARS500 km+Moving Ships / Coastal Batteries
XM1155-SCM777 / Paladin110 kmHidden Missile Launchers in Valleys
ExcaliburM77740–60 kmPoint targets on the immediate shoreline
TomahawkShips/Subs1,600 kmHardened command bunkers deep inland

Why these are better for the "North Shore"

Using these systems from the Musandam Peninsula (south shore) allows the Marines to:

  1. Avoid the Zagros Trap: They don't need to land "on top" of the mountains where they are vulnerable [Previous Turn].
  2. Total Coverage: From the Omani side, a single HIMARS battery with PrSMs can cover the entire Strait and almost every Iranian naval base on the northern coast.
  3. Accuracy: These aren't "dumb" bombs; they can hit a specific window or a moving boat, minimizing the risk of hitting civilian oil tankers. Lockheed MartinLockheed Martin +3

Weapon Reach from the Musandam Peninsula (South Shore)

As of April 2026, the US and allied forces utilize a "layered defense" strategy. By positioning these systems on the Musandam Peninsula, they can control the entire Strait without needing to land in the

  • M982 Excalibur (40 km): This is your "inner guard." It covers the primary shipping lanes and can accurately hit Iranian fast-attack boats or coastal anti-ship missile sites on the immediate north shore.
  • XM1155-SC (110 km): Reaching over 110 km (68 miles), this sub-caliber shell allows traditional M777 artillery to strike deep into the Zagros foothills. It is specifically designed to hit moving targets or missile launchers hidden in valleys that standard air strikes might miss.
  • PrSM - Precision Strike Missile (500 km): Fired from HIMARS, the PrSM (Increment 2) is a dedicated "ship-killer" that reaches far beyond the mountains to hit Iranian command hubs and naval bases like Bandar Abbas.
  • Tomahawk (1,600 km): Launched from Navy ships and submarines patrolling the Gulf of Oman, these provide the "over-the-horizon" capability to strike any target within the Iranian interior with high precision. National Defense MagazineNational Defense Magazine +8

Tactical Advantage of the "South Shore" Reach

By staying in Oman, the Marines maintain a secure supply line while their weapons "reach across" the water to create a no-fly and no-sail zone. This prevents the "Fishbowl Effect" where Marines would be vulnerable if they landed directly in the Zagros peaks. 



02 April 2026

Europe's New Self-Reliance Post WW 2, Post Cold War & the Strait of Hormuz

The crisis in the Strait of Hormuz has sharply highlighted Europe’s uncertain strategic position after the end of the Cold War. Many institutions and economic interests in both the United States and Europe had grown comfortable with the Cold War framework and were reluctant to see it end. Yet global circumstances have continued to evolve. President Trump, at least, appears to recognize the new configuration of national powers and the specific challenges it presents.

After the Second World War, Europe was in ruins—much like Ukraine today—with widespread destruction and heavy casualties. The Marshall Plan helped fund reconstruction, but recovery was neither quick nor simple. European militaries were weakened, and the Soviet Union immediately emerged as a major threat to the West. The Soviets, understandably, had no interest in a “catch and release” arrangement with a Western Europe that still contained Nazi sympathizers in several countries. Spain, for example, had already experienced a civil war that brought fascists to power.

After nearly half a century of communist occupation and supervision, the Eastern European nations under Soviet control were finally released at the end of the Cold War. To prevent any resurgence of fascism in Germany, the country was required to forgo certain weapons and military capabilities, even as former Nazis were gradually reintegrated. Several nations passed laws banning the advocacy of Nazi ideology, creating institutionalized restrictions on free speech. Some observers suggest the U.S. Democratic Party has modeled aspects of its approach to speech and thought control on this paradigm—labeling opponents as fascists, racists, or servants of authoritarian interests.

For nearly fifty years, Western Europe relied on the United States as the backbone of its military defense against communist expansion. NATO was created primarily to counter the Soviet threat. At the time, China was not yet a significant strategic concern; its communist revolution concluded in 1949, and it did not develop a nuclear weapon until 1964.

The Cold War became a global struggle against communist expansion. While Stalin had favored “socialism in one country,” after his death Soviet leadership shifted toward a more internationalist policy closer to Trotsky’s vision—one that Stalin had fiercely opposed. This shift fueled proxy wars, revolutions in Africa, the Vietnam conflict, and global terrorism. Over time, both the U.S. and the Soviet Union adopted Mutual Assured Destruction (MAD) doctrines as their nuclear arsenals grew large enough to destroy civilization many times over.

Arms reduction talks and periods of détente followed. President Reagan famously urged Gorbachev to “tear down this wall.” Earlier, President Kennedy had visited Berlin and declared, “Ich bin ein Berliner.” As a World War II veteran, Kennedy understood the horrors of war. President Eisenhower had an even deeper grasp of global military strategy, though he was less informed about Iranian politics and history. He authorized the CIA to overthrow Iran’s elected constitutional government in 1953, fearing a communist takeover after Prime Minister Mossadegh nationalized British oil interests. That decision marked the beginning of long-term Iranian hostility toward the United States and helped set the stage for Iran’s later push to develop nuclear weapons.

Before the CIA-backed coup, the United States had actually enjoyed significant popularity in Iran, thanks in part to effective American economic advisers who had assisted the Iranian government.

When President Reagan, working with Mikhail Gorbachev, helped bring the Cold War to an end, many Western politicians were unprepared for the change. For a time, Reagan stood nearly alone in his administration in his desire for genuine peace with Russia and the ultimate elimination of nuclear weapons. He was far ahead of his time. Even George H.W. Bush needed time to fully shift course and continue Reagan’s policy of engagement.

Europeans were understandably elated at the end of a divided continent. However, President Clinton—shaped by his Oxford background and limited grasp of Russian history—worked with Boris Yeltsin (an alcoholic leader famously seen running around the White House lawn in his underwear) in ways that contributed to the current Ukraine conflict. As some historians have noted, Russia was never going to permanently accept the complete loss of Ukraine and especially Crimea. A future reckoning was likely inevitable.

Twenty-five years after the Cold War’s end, Europe has used the Ukraine conflict as a lever to maintain military momentum, keep all of Ukraine under Western influence, and impose long-term sanctions on Russia. With the International Criminal Court based in Europe and European-led charges of war crimes against President Putin, sanctions are unlikely to end even if the fighting stops—unless Putin ends up in The Hague. The war has proven good business for some, and previous U.S. administrations provided full funding. It could have been ended earlier through diplomacy, allowing sanctions to lift and the global economy to normalize.

Europe clearly has different priorities regarding Ukraine than the United States. The U.S. largely wants the war to end and opposes indefinitely financing a Ukrainian regime that appears willing to risk escalation toward World War III. President Zelensky has already called for nuclear weapons, and some European nations have discussed allowing aircraft carrying nuclear arms into Ukraine. France, Britain, and Germany continue to supply weapons, intelligence, and advisers, while also targeting Russian oil infrastructure.

The United States, facing Iran’s nuclear ambitions, support for terrorism, and threats to Israel, is now engaged in conflict in the Persian Gulf region. Washington has asked Europe for support, noting that Europe (and Asia) also depend heavily on oil from the area. Europe has largely refused, even denying U.S. military aircraft use of their bases for Middle East operations. Since most of these nations are NATO members, their refusal effectively signals that the alliance—designed for the Cold War era—has become obsolete. European leaders now have different interests and threat assessments than they did between 1945 and 1989.

After losing most of its third-world colonies in the decades following World War II, Europe appears to have viewed a weakened post-Soviet Russia as an opportunity to establish new influence. President Clinton persuaded Yeltsin, as leader of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), to accept arrangements that detached Ukraine from Russia—despite Ukraine having been part of Russia before the 1917 Communist Revolution.

Europe has clearly recovered from its devastated post-World War II condition. It can now afford to fund its own militaries and no longer needs the United States as its primary defender against communism. Ironically, some European governments themselves exhibit tendencies that critics associate with creeping socialism or authoritarian control over speech and policy.

Rather than rigid, mechanical alliances like the current NATO structure, it may be wiser to develop flexible, tacit understandings based on mutual interests. The goal should be restoring healthy international relations, healing the global environment, reducing poverty, and protecting human rights and free speech worldwide.

Many observers remain concerned about German military rearmament and the possible development of advanced weapons systems, including traditional weapons of mass destruction.

President Trump is navigating this complex “three-ring circus” of global political and military challenges as the world moves beyond the old NATO framework. NATO’s rules and commitments will likely need reform toward a more flexible, libertarian-style arrangement without automatic binding defense obligations. Russia is highly unlikely to attack the Baltic states, despite warnings from Zelensky aimed at securing more Western aid. The Baltic states were historically part of the Russian sphere before 1917 (acquired after Sweden’s defeat in the Great Northern War), yet they are small, difficult to hold in modern war without massive destruction, and not economically essential to Russia.

Nations ultimately thrive better through peace and prosperity than through endless military conflict. Ukraine could reasonably be divided into two viable states with open borders, special lifetime visas for citizens on both sides, and liberal trade policies. With normal economic relations, the main differences would be taxes and local elections. Healthy competition between the two could even drive progress.

The Trump administration cannot anticipate every scenario that may emerge from adversarial actions in the Strait of Hormuz. Iran, short of capitulating or being replaced by a regime more aligned with U.S. and Israeli interests, may seek Chinese naval assistance to ensure continued access to and control over the Strait.

Within its limited strategic deck, Iran’s strongest remaining card may be an attempt to shift oil transactions away from the dollar toward the yuan. There are already indications that Tehran has considered allowing passage through the Strait only under yuan-based settlement conditions—a move aimed less at immediate economics than at long-term pressure on the global financial system.

That is a scenario the administration is aware of, increasing the likelihood that Kharg Island—Iran’s primary oil export terminal—could be targeted to cripple its ability to load oil onto tankers. Such a move would not only constrain Iran’s revenue but also limit its capacity to play that currency card effectively.

In turn, this would likely accelerate U.S. efforts in solar panel construction and broader energy innovation, both to offset supply disruptions and to avoid ceding further ground to China in the global energy transition.

30 March 2026

Remembrance (poem)

 

Maybe somewhere new forests could be grown
maybe on Mars, perhaps someplace unknown
caves and mountains don’t really decline
they just can seem that way
following the wrong signs

Somewhere geckos don’t think and run free
maybe in a desert where flies like to be
spaceships and mouse slips
are cut from the same
sort of theories of morrows
and new things to be

Circles and ages and ages inclined’
toward building up softly
forests and vines
natural structures added to fate
in remembrance of pasts
never so late

The edge of time
seems like the point of non-being
wherever meaning rhymes
with the always that would.


Trees Could Be Made to Grow Very Tall in Martian Gravity 38% of Earth's

 Lower gravity on Mars allowed Olympus Mons to grow and become the tallest volcanic mountain in the solar system without collapsing inward or depressing the planetary crust. Mars should enable builders to construct lightweight structures with fewer height limits, and some very tall structures and wind generators powered by dust storms. Trees on Earth have a height limit because pushing the water for the plant beyond a certain height breaks the water transport veins (xylem embolism). That would not be the case on Mars, and trees might be adapted to grow twice as high as Redwoods within a suitable environment rich in carbon dioxide and sheltered from temperature extremes. Perhaps the trees can be covered with an expanding air leak-proof membrane and be the primary pillars of support in a self-bootstraping ecosystem.



Iran Targets Water Making Plants- Zelensky Targets Russian Oil Export Facilities

Iran has escalated from attacking military bases, oil tankers, and oil shipping facilities to striking desalination plants that supply water to civilian populations in Persian Gulf countries. They hit a plant in Kuwait yesterday, killing an Indian worker. This escalation is plainly a war crime.

Replacing water production for these desert nations within the short timeframe people can survive without it (a maximum of about three days) would be extraordinarily difficult. Bureaucracies do not move that fast. If global warming, the federal deficit, or Homeland Security funding needed to be fixed within three days, the results would likely be just as chaotic.

It is challenging to weigh President Trump's options regarding Iran and the Strait of Hormuz. A ground invasion of the Iranian littoral and the strategic Persian Gulf islands would likely cost many American lives. Iranian forces hold superior battlefield positions, allowing them to attack downhill with sustained waves of drones and rockets. The time required to sanitize the Strait safely for shipping would be significant. While U.S. military counter-drone technology will improve over time, it will not arrive soon enough to fully protect Persian Gulf allies from ongoing Iranian drone and missile attacks.

A boots-on-the-ground operation in Iran to secure the Strait of Hormuz could also cost Republicans control of the House of Representatives, unless it proves to be a quick and victorious campaign—an improbable outcome for such an invasion.

U.S. troops heading to the region could help defend Persian Gulf allies while supporting efforts to engineer emergency water production—perhaps by transporting desalination equipment or other solutions across the region's deserts. Developing alternative routes to export oil and import water, even as long-term hostilities with Iran continue, may be the least ineffective approach.

Kharg Island and other Iranian oil production facilities could be targeted and razed using air power, such as B-52 strikes. This would deprive Iran's government of critical income from oil and gas sales.

As the world's leading oil producer, the United States could sell large volumes of oil at elevated prices to Europe and Asia while regime change develops in Iran over the course of a year or more. With domestic gasoline prices rising as a result, the Trump administration could take the bold step of offering tax cuts and incentives to electric vehicle producers and buyers, while quantitatively stimulating solar panel and alternative energy production in the United States. This could help attract some environmental voters from the Democratic side and improve Republican chances in the upcoming House and Senate elections.

The American oil industry already stands to reap record profits while Iran continues targeting Persian Gulf oil exports, so they are unlikely to oppose the policy.


                                   image credit- Google Maps

America's air defense equipment is not good enough to defend Persian Gulf allies against Iranian drones and missiles. The U.S.A. is developing lasers to target incoming drones, yet the army's ground based HVP weapon to hit missiles within 10 miles isn't yet ready for prime time. It is still "being developed".

"The U.S. Army's "smart pebbles" ground-based Hypervelocity (HPV) weapon is formally known as the Hypervelocity Projectile (HVP), a next-generation, guided, kinetic-energy projectile designed to be fired from conventional 155mm cannons for high-speed missile defense."

Emperor Zelensky is of course targeting Russian oil and gas facilities in order to drive up the cost of oil for Europe (supplying Ukraine with military support) and reduce Russian revenue supplying oil to Europe. He may leverage anti-drone defense experience from Ukraine to offer to help out the Persian Gulf alliance 'in exchange for'... The U.S. should be able to develop its own cloud of anti-drone drones for short term use. TEMU supplies drones for $29.95. Anti-drone defense drones need to be better quality though, and with smarter AI chips. Someday homeowners may buy their own anti-drone drones from TEMU or ebay- such as a Peregrine raptor-predator model, co-piloted with a good AI chip.

Supplying water to the Persian Gulf is the most interesting and vital challenge to find a solution for. It is something to consider. It is hard to believe that with so many years to prep for anti-drone defenses that the U.S.A. wasn't ready to defend against the mass of cheap weapons Iran has stored in hidden, distributed bunkers and basements.

29 March 2026

The Cloud of Knowing (poem and song)

 

All possible worldlines of waveforms
unentangled in the mind of God
infinite tensor product
like a cloud of knowing
from the ultimate observer

The speed of causality
is the speed of light
vibrations apportioned to tensors
not everything everywhere at once
time enables being to exist and occur

The download from infinity
from a structural map without time
to motion in relativistic perspectives
reductions to being
tensor entangled field waves

A tensor network state
concatenated excitation of entangled fields
relate Plato’s realm of forms
from shadows into a dreamscape with time
transforming static potential to actualized norms

A pebble dropped through a still pond’s surface
-blue cloth covered the ark of the covenant.

https://suno.com/s/DB2aTwkjr1A9wxzW

Sieves of Destruction (song and poem)

 

I would like to know
if 360 degrees have a world aglow
with day and night tight
where the political clues lead someplace right
so life don’t end in wars that say good night

Walking through the desert storms
generally around haboobs are norms
over landscapes known with satellite pictures
vast spaces shrunk and with city spots sink

Dust to dust piles of crumblin concrete
and nothing’s too lively
nothing too neat
streets point to the nowhere
that was somewhere before
death came a knockin
on everyone’s front door

Marvelous egression from long legged white birds
standing in ocean foam searching for fish
things that go on unseen below
distracted with greed, taken by undertow

Third world wars traditional warp time around
painting curt dreams with crunchy pretzel frowns

Give the jimmies to the da sein
give the pass over to morrows
live the time with hope and windows
for a future above not below.

https://suno.com/s/5YEkXmBBk0QCwPPP

28 March 2026

'Another FIne Mess'; President Trump, Public Debt, Petrodollars, Zelensky and WW 3

 President Trump does not pursue wealth with half measures, yet he appears to approach ending the wars in Ukraine and Iran with precisely that—half measures. By the time he finishes his term, the United States may carry roughly $45 trillion in national debt. That figure could surge 200–300% if the dollar collapses following the end of the petrodollar system and a shift toward petroyuan dominance.

Trump seems to thrive on these high-stakes, emergent situations. Meanwhile, President Zelensky has asked the West for nuclear weapons to offset Russia’s nuclear advantage. He apparently seeks to upgrade Ukraine’s existing MAD (Mutually Assured Destruction) policy into an active nuclear exchange with Russia. If Moscow were vaporized, Russia would almost certainly retaliate with an all-out strike involving thousands of nuclear warheads against the West. The Russians have deep institutional experience with MAD doctrine; handing nuclear weapons to Zelensky is a losing hand to play.

The situation in Iran is equally perilous. The original Aryan nation—Iran derives from the word “Aryan”—is led by descendants of the ancient Persian and Parthian Empires. (The last Shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, bore a name meaning “Parthian.”) Iran is fighting on its home ground, backed by Russia, China, and other allies, in what is likely to become a protracted war of resistance against U.S. efforts to control the Strait of Hormuz.

Even basic Toyota pickups can transport Russian, Chinese, and Iranian missiles with a 25-mile range to positions threatening the Strait. There are dozens of additional ways to deliver force capable of sinking oil supertankers. Joined by fanatical Shi’a fighters, the opposition will be more than happy to tie the United States down in the Persian Gulf for a decade of costly conflict, with enormous opportunity costs for America.

This war might never have escalated had the U.S. ended sanctions on Russia and restored normal commercial and diplomatic relations. Without such pressure, Russia would have had far less motivation to divert Western attention and resources toward the Middle East. Ukraine’s advance has already slowed, partly because Starlink has been provided exclusively to Ukrainian forces. A U.S.-brokered settlement along the Dnipro River region could have ended the conflict earlier.

Iranians themselves are divided in their political preferences. Roughly 30% support restoration of the monarchy, 30% strongly oppose it, and another 30% are indifferent. Historically, Iran has been ruled in rotation by civilians, the military, and theocrats, with leadership shifting through different approaches to internal change. No one can confidently predict the outcome of political upheaval there. Leftists who helped bring Ayatollah Khomeini to power in the 1979 revolution were quickly liquidated when he suppressed the Iranian communist party (Tudeh). The late Shah harbored ambitions to dominate the region but was thwarted. Ordinary Iranians once worked in U.S.-linked hospitals yet were denied equal treatment, breeding resentment. Britain may still harbor hopes of reclaiming influence over Iranian oil fields.

In summary, as Laurel and Hardy might have put it: “Well, here’s another fine mess you’ve gotten me into.”Democrats continue to push for open borders and, through movements like “No Kings,” seek to depose what they view as the American monarchy under Trump. The only apparent hope—if Democrats regain power—is that they might implement a $30 trillion anti-global warming program, pushing total U.S. public debt toward $75 trillion, plus the routine addition of another trillion dollars annually through deficit spending.

Fundamentally, there is little serious leadership competition for the Republican “Kings” who at least defend national borders and add less to the national debt. Democrats are disingenuous about a sustainable economy and politics; they too are reliant on petrodollar politics. Solar panels dropped in price 50% because the Chinese mixed communist politics combined with free enterprise over-produced solar panels. Now they may find windfall profits and political influence gain by saturating the planet and third world with solar panels while the cost of oil rises.

What President Trump could do more decisively is target Iran’s oil export capacity, reducing it to roughly 300,000 barrels per day—the amount currently exported via a pipeline safely away from the Strait of Hormuz. About 95% of Iran’s oil production flows through Kharg Island in the Persian Gulf. Reducing that facility to rubble would cripple Iran’s ability to finance new weapons purchases, which would be strategically useful in any protracted conflict where the Strait is likely to remain contested or closed to U.S. allies anyway.

It is positive that Iran’s nuclear weapons program has been severely damaged. Now is the time to halt Iranian oil sales entirely and, in the event of a post-theocratic government, offer targeted loans or assistance so Iran can purchase Chinese-made solar panels and accelerate a practical transition to electric vehicles and domestically produced power.

Omniscience and Contingence

God is more than a cloud of knowledge
Surrounding a Universe
Entangling quantum uncertainty
There is nothing unknown
With the Creator

27 March 2026

Morphed Lorentz Invariance (a poem)

 

Stacks of dimensions
complied like safe tumblers
iterations of everything structured
revolving, evolving, devolving,
involving enterprising ideas
stablishing motion with time skipped scuppers
alit like neutrinos coated in marinating radiation

Conventions of assembly entailed structured intentions
inertia warping Lorentz invariance
forms of forces root themselves
across Universes
twisting at the edges
ledges where slices are waves of particles
billiard balls dropping from the edge of a concatenation
through intersecting membranes
that are dimensions pulled like taffy
too thin now
harnessed to work
new stands formed of force

Rooted within Universes of existence
life entangled in web sectors
momentary meaning
where the time is fleeting
thus opportunity of being saved
sides with space expanding
day and night
are sights of phenomena fore thought

Myriad mazes of dimension universes
with laws across are stacked and racked
through integral field tensors transforming together
non-local levers enabling coordinate Universe storms
as if norms were gradients of shapes
becoming worn.

https://suno.com/s/gCVS7GzLSqoqkjvn this poem as a song

God's relationship with an emergent, entangled energy quantity regarded a the Universe surpasses and transcends any physical theory tensor or description of vector and tensor space of a Universe. Such finite theories are simple phenomenal even when they are configured to account for observable phenomena exhaustively. The exhaustive description if it ever exists, remains finite and subject to non-contingent being; aka the cloud of knowing encompassing the physical phenomena perceived as being.



26 March 2026

Kharg Island, Iran War, B-52s, Soar Power and Marines- What WIll President Trump Choose?

 (edited with Grok) There is a certain moral correctness to conducting a war to eliminate nuclear weapons development by a state that might well use them to incinerate select Middle Eastern and European targets. That criterion evaporates when the battle morphs into one to secure oil sales for the world.

The Strait of Hormuz is the primary gateway through which super-tankers carrying oil from Iranian Shi’a and Sunni nations pass to worldwide destinations. Iran is able to act as a gatekeeper and target ships that don’t pay it protection money for passing. The United States is even allowing Iran to sell its oil that is piped to Persian Gulf shipping facilities in order to keep the price of oil from moving higher. That action is rare in the annals of war. Usually nations strive to halt an opponent’s cash income and fuel supply if possible, rather than enable it. That act demonstrates the dependence the United States and the world still have on a product that is changing the temperature of the atmosphere and oceans through greenhouse gases caused by burning fossil fuels—especially in cars. Automobiles are the largest source of greenhouse gases in the United States.

A right-thinking environmentalist President would make peace with Russia unilaterally and expedite American development of electric cars that don’t require fossil fuels. Reducing demand is another way to keep the price of oil down. A right-thinking environmentalist might choose to carpet-bomb Kharg Island’s Iranian oil facilities that fill super-tankers bound for the world. Kharg Island, a small coral outcrop about 25 km off Iran’s coast, handles roughly 90% of Iran’s crude oil exports—around 1.5 to 1.7 million barrels per day in normal times, with storage capacity nearing 30-31 million barrels. Its deep-water jetties and massive tank farms make it the indispensable hub for loading very large crude carriers (VLCCs). Secondary strikes could hit the smaller terminals on Lavan Island (handling lighter, higher-quality Lavan Blend crude, with about 200,000 b/d capacity and 5.5 million barrels storage) and Sirri Island (exporting the medium-gravity Sirri Blend from offshore fields). Qeshm Island, near the Strait of Hormuz, also hosts some oil infrastructure along with naval and missile facilities, though its export role is smaller. That would save American lives from an invasion and provide B-52 crews with an opportunity to “win one for the Gipper,” as President Reagan might have said.

Economic factors can conflict with military goals. Destroying Iran’s Persian Gulf oil production and shipping facilities—especially the massive hub on Kharg Island—is possibly the correct way to go militarily. Iran, as a semi-desert nation, is probably better off developing solar power than relying on oil to improve the standard of living of ordinary people. Persian Gulf ally nations (Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Iraq) already have or urgently need expanded pipelines to the Red Sea to bypass the Strait permanently and keep global oil flowing without Iranian gatekeeping. Saudi Arabia’s existing 1,200-km East-West Pipeline (Petroline) to Yanbu on the Red Sea, built in the 1980s, is currently being ramped to its full 7 million b/d capacity in a matter of days or weeks—proving that major diversions are feasible almost immediately in a crisis. Iraq’s long-proposed Basra-Aqaba pipeline (~1,700 km to Jordan’s Red Sea port) has been stalled for years due to politics and security issues, but could be fast-tracked in 18–36 months under wartime urgency with build-operate-transfer financing along pre-surveyed routes (though similar projects have historically taken 3–4 years). Longer-term proposals to route oil westward through the Arabian Peninsula to Israeli Mediterranean or Red Sea ports would likely take 3+ years due to multi-nation coordination but would eliminate choke points forever.

The present global situation has several political tensions engaging in causal relationships, creating unintended consequences and spin-offs from primary conflicts in the Ukraine and Iranian wars. Tunnel-visioned politicians pursuing narrow goals can fail to see the opportunity costs and digressions from starting points. A conflict with Iran, backed by China, Russia, and others in great depth, might require a couple of million soldiers to entirely pacify. A guerrilla war of simply launching rockets at tankers could continue for decades from the Persian Gulf shore and the Strait of Hormuz. Iran’s much-touted Goreh-Jask pipeline to the Gulf of Oman (intended as a Hormuz bypass) remains severely underutilized in practice—often operating far below even its modest effective capacity of around 300,000 barrels per day—making it a poor substitute for the Gulf terminals that handle the vast majority of its exports. It might be practical to look beyond the conflict and develop alternative energy production facilities in the U.S.A. while increasing domestic oil production to help feed the global oil addiction until the methadone of solar and other alternative power can wean the world off oil—before winters become cooler summers.