Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
April 23, 2026
War On Iran: A Stalemate With No End In Sight

U.S. President Donald Trump has again chickened out of his threats to Iran:

Trump said the ceasefire had been due to end on Wednesday, but he decided to keep it in place because the government in Tehran is “seriously fractured.”

He said the pause will continue “until such time as” Iran’s leaders and representatives submit a “unified proposal” to end the war with the United States and Israel. Trump also said he made the move after a request from Asim Munir and Shehbaz Sharif of Pakistan. He said he directed the U.S. military to keep the blockade in place until a proposal is delivered.

The U.S. has, as Trump had previously acknowledged, already received Iran’s 10-point proposal.

What Trump is acknowledging without saying it is that it is unlikely that there will be any negotiated settlement of the war. The U.S. is structurally incapable of lifting sanctions on Iran or signing a peace treaty. Iran is unwilling to give up its (enrichment) rights for bare promises Trump or his successors are unlikely to hold.

The conflict will thus continue.

Iran’s military capabilities are sufficient to wage a long war. The intense U.S. and Israeli bombing campaign was unable to disarm the country:

About half of Iran’s stockpile of ballistic missiles and its associated launch systems were still intact as of the start of the ceasefire in early April, three of the officials told CBS News.
Roughly 60% of the naval arm of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps is still in existence, the officials said, including fast-attack speed boats.

About two-thirds of Iran’s air force is still believed to be operational, the officials said, after an intensive U.S. and Israeli campaign that struck thousands of targets, including storage and production facilities.

The head of the Defense Intelligence Agency submitted a written statement ahead of a House Armed Services Committee hearing that said Iran can still inflict damage.

“Iran retains thousands of missiles and one-way attack UAVs that can threaten U.S. and partner forces throughout the region, despite degradations to its capabilities from both attrition and expenditure,” Marine Lt. Gen. James Adams wrote.
Previously, the president and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth have described the U.S. effort, called Operation Epic Fury, as essentially destroying Iran’s military capacity.

That is a meager outcome if one believes reports that the Pentagon has used up nearly 50% of its relevant munition:

Over the last seven weeks of war, the US military has expended at least 45% of its stockpile of Precision Strike Missiles; at least half of its inventory of THAAD missiles, which are designed to intercept ballistic missiles; and nearly 50% of its stockpile of Patriot air defense interceptor missiles, according to a new analysis conducted by the Center for Strategic and International Studies. Those numbers closely align with classified Pentagon data about US stockpiles, according to the sources familiar with the assessment.

The US military has also expended approximately 30% of its Tomahawk missile stockpile; more than 20% of its stockpile of long-range Joint Air-to-Surface Standoff Missiles; and approximately 20% of its SM-3 and SM-6 missiles, according to the analysis and the sources. It would take around four to five years to replace those systems.

By now Trump’s bluffs have been called not only once or twice but five times:

On five separate occasions, the president has set deadlines for Iran to come to his terms or face his wrath.

And each time, he’s delayed that deadline despite little or no public evidence that Iran met the terms as he laid them out.

The U.S. has run out of option but is unwilling to concede its defeat.

Each day the damage due to Iran’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz is increasing (archived):

The International Monetary Fund warned last week that under a severe scenario—where the conflict continues for months and keeps oil prices elevated—world economic growth could fall to 2% in 2026, a rate seen only during the deepest recent global recessions. That compares with the IMF’s main, or “reference,” scenario, in which there is a quick resolution and global output grows by 3.1% this year.

The conflict has already proven more disruptive to global energy markets than the 1973 oil crisis. The fallout extends far beyond crude.

Supply chains are also gummed up for helium, crucial for the artificial-intelligence chips boom, and fertilizers, essential for global food security. Aluminum prices are near a four-year high that was reached earlier this month amid war-related smelter closures across the Gulf, which accounts for around 10% of global supply.

Current U.S. propaganda is claiming that the leadership in Iran is not united:

Trump’s negotiators believe a deal to end the war and address what’s left of Iran’s nuclear program is still achievable. But they also worry they may not have anyone in Tehran empowered to say yes.

  • Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei is barely communicating. The IRGC generals now in control of the country and Iran’s civilian negotiators are openly at odds over strategy.
  • “We saw that there is an absolute fracture inside Iran between the negotiators and the military — with neither side having access to the supreme leader, who is not responsive,” a U.S. official said.

That is a serious misreading of the political process in Iran. The national security council under the Supreme Leader has always been the main forum of major foreign policy decisions. On national security issues President Pezeshkian and Foreign Minister Araghchi are diplomats, not policy makers. The distinction between “hardliners” and “moderates” in Iran is thus not valid.

Main stream opinion writers who, with Trump’s applause, are calling for murdering the allegedly resistive party in Iran are only exposing their ignorance.

With his latest TACO Trump has pushed the problem out into the future. I expect him to try to ignore the situation he has created until more significant damage in the U.S. economy becomes visible.

Meanwhile Iran can, should and likely will increase the pressure. The most obvious move is to ask Ansarollah (the Houthi) in Yemen to close the southern Bab al-Mandeb outlet of the Red Sea.

This would block another 5% of the global oil output and thus increase the economic pressure.

Comments

Ah, poor Gavin … Persian Empire? Really? I know; it’s hard to deal with the fact that “we’re the baddies”, isn’t it. But it’s true nevertheless. As MLK said decades ago, the US is the world’s biggest purveyor of violence. It’s much worse now … not even close in terms of your grade school lessons.
 
The Gulf Arabs realize now that their security bargain with the US is a disaster … their problem is, it’s not easy to tell the violent “protector” to buzz off. Look what’s happening with Iraq; the US has all kinds of tools to enforce continued servitude dressed up as agreements. A bigger and bigger role for China might eventually do the trick but it will take a long time. 

Posted by: Caliman | Apr 23 2026 19:54 utc | 101

Those poor, innocent Gulf states, won’t anyone please think of them?

Posted by: Stanislav Vladimirovich | Apr 23 2026 19:41 utc | 118
 
Yes, the very same “poor, innocent Gulf states” that had US military bases and radar installations, bases used to launch attacks on Iran.
 
Or how about “poor, innocent” Bahrain, home to the headquarters, headquarters of the US Navy Fifth Fleet?
 
The poster @ Gavin Longmuir is being deliberately deceitful by not acknowledging these factors, when he complains about Iran attacking the Gulf states.
 
A phrase not often heard these days: “Iran has the right to self-defence”.

Posted by: Jeremy Rhymings-Lang | Apr 23 2026 19:55 utc | 102

🇮🇷🇮🇱❗️BREAKING: Hostile drones were launched inside Tehran and subsequently intercepted by the Iranian air defense system.
 
– Most probably Mossad Activity.

https://t.me/intelslava/86941

 

Posted by: Norwegian | Apr 23 2026 19:55 utc | 103

Dr Warwick Powell:
I wrote an op-ed for the South China Morning Post published today.
It argues two main things.
 
First, the U.S. is not energy independent as much rhetoric would suggest. It’s more complex than that, and the U.S. is affected by what’s happening in the Persian Gulf and by global dynamics.
 
Second, it argues that this is should be a moment of reckoning and serious strategic reflection by countries in Asia.
 
https://amp.scmp.com/opinion/world-opinion/article/3350726/iran-war-reflects-false-promise-us-energy-dominance

Posted by: Nemesis | Apr 23 2026 19:57 utc | 104

Dr Warwick Powell:

I wrote an op-ed for the South China Morning Post published today.
It argues two main things.
 
First, the U.S. is not energy independent as much rhetoric would suggest. It’s more complex than that, and the U.S. is affected by what’s happening in the Persian Gulf and by global dynamics.
 
Second, it argues that this is should be a moment of reckoning and serious strategic reflection by countries in Asia.
 
https://amp.scmp.com/opinion/world-opinion/article/3350726/iran-war-reflects-false-promise-us-energy-dominance

Posted by: Nemesis | Apr 23 2026 19:57 utc | 105

@119 re USS Eisenhower.
Eisenhower is not in dry dock.  Re- Fit is almost done. However it caught on fire last week. (Laundry Room?),  The fire may delay its availability. 
 
https://news.usni.org/2026/04/16/carrier-uss-dwight-d-eisenhower-suffers-fire-at-norfolk-naval-shipyard

Posted by: golddigger | Apr 23 2026 19:58 utc | 106

There are also geopolitical changes that will occur because of this evolution in energy systems for productive output. The Outlaw US Empire’s longstanding policy to control the flow of oil as a way to control economic growth will no longer work when nations are freed from dependency on hydrocarbons, and this crisis will drive that point home in ways it couldn’t previously.    
Posted by: karlof1 | Apr 23 2026 18:44 utc | 85
———————————————————————-
Interesting thesis, but can the world live without hydrocarbons, is my question.
 
It seems to me that it cannot. There is oil and there is nat gas as source material. There are four major types of oil and 160 subtypes. Some energy can be sourced by other means, hydro, wind, solar, and dynamos driven by (during WW II where I come from) bicycles.

Posted by: Acco Hengst | Apr 23 2026 19:59 utc | 107

TNA: Brian Berletic: “US blockade on Iran seeks to ultimately strangle China.”
Yes, those who wear the geopolitical hat, always see China as the ultimate guise in everything. I wonder if they have analysts, who see the struggle against evil empire USA, in every vicissitude that arises.

Posted by: Call it what u will | Apr 23 2026 20:03 utc | 108

Suppressed News;
 
🚨JUST IN: Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz:
“Israel is prepared to renew the war against Iran. The IDF is prepared for both defense and offense, and the targets are marked.
We are waiting for the green light from the U.S., first and foremost, to complete the elimination of the Khamenei dynasty and to return Iran to the dark and stone ages by destroying Iran’s major energy and power facilities.
This time, our strikes will be different and more deadly, and will deliver further devastating blows to the most painful places, which will shake and collapse the regime’s foundations.”

Posted by: Nemesis | Apr 23 2026 20:06 utc | 109

Posted by: Exile | Apr 23 2026 19:51 utc | 124
 
Former Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson has called on U.S. authorities to draft an emergency contingency plan for a potential collapse in demand for U.S. Treasurys. Speaking to Bloomberg on Thursday, Paulson said the plan needs to be “targeted and short-term” and ready before a crisis hits. “When we hit it, it will be vicious, so we have to prepare for that eventuality,” he said.
 
https://coinmarketcap.com/academy/article/ex-treasury-secretary-paulson-urges-emergency-plan-for-us-treasury-market-crash
 

Posted by: Whipping Post | Apr 23 2026 20:08 utc | 111

@119 re USS Eisenhower.Eisenhower is not in dry dock.  Re- Fit is almost done. However it caught on fire last week. (Laundry Room?),  The fire may delay its availability.  https://news.usni.org/2026/04/16/carrier-uss-dwight-d-eisenhower-suffers-fire-at-norfolk-naval-shipyard
Posted by: golddigger | Apr 23 2026 19:58 utc | 134
———————————————————
You are right, it is moored. I usually skip the local news. From the Leo Bot:
 
The USS Dwight D. Eisenhower (CVN-69) is currently in active service and undergoing scheduled maintenance at the Norfolk Naval Shipyard in Portsmouth, Virginia.  The carrier arrived at the shipyard on January 8, 2025, for a Planned Incremental Availability (PIA) focused on propulsion systems, combat systems, and crew habitability updates to extend its service life until its expected replacement around 2029
Key Current Status Details:

  • Recent Incident: On April 14, 2026, the ship experienced a small fire while moored at the shipyard.  The blaze was immediately contained and extinguished by ship and shipyard personnel. Three sailors (per USNI News) or eight sailors (per Navy Times) were treated by the ship’s medical team and returned to full duty; the Navy has not specified the cause of the fire. 

Posted by: Acco Hengst | Apr 23 2026 20:15 utc | 112

Interesting thesis, but can the world live without hydrocarbons, is my question.
It seems to me that it cannot.

Posted by: Acco Hengst | Apr 23 2026 19:59 utc | 135
 
You’re correct, it can’t, unless it finds a substitute for thermoplastics, materials that (happily for electrical systems) have excellent electrical insulation properties. Stops all those Volts and Amps from finding their own way Ohm…

Posted by: Jeremy Rhymings-Lang | Apr 23 2026 20:19 utc | 113

Acco and Jeremy – The world doesn’t have to “live without hydrocarbons” … it just needs to need much less of them to be a new world. 
In other words, there’s a big difference between needing HCs to power your transportation and industry versus the non-fuel uses of HCs … fertilizers, plastics, etc. … even a 25-50% reduction in overall need for HCs would to a large degree eliminate the strategic value of the Persian Gulf. 

Posted by: Caliman | Apr 23 2026 20:29 utc | 114

Cables, electrical power cables, multi-core comms cables, even fibre-optic cables, none are possible without thermoplastics, hence none are possible without hydrocarbons, unless a suitable substitute is discovered and developed.
 
Apologies for the off-topic.

Posted by: Jeremy Rhymings-Lang | Apr 23 2026 20:30 utc | 115

Re AI fakes, just having Updates tagged on to the end of their names gives you a clue to their common source, stop trolling guys

Posted by: Monty | Apr 23 2026 20:31 utc | 116

 Jeremy Rhymings-Lang | Apr 23 2026 20:30 utc | 147
 
Quite amazing how everything is so integrated in this modern world we take for granted at times or simply never have reason to look into.
Now that the US has massively interrupted the worlds supply chains, many things that went unnoticed are now coming to the fore.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Apr 23 2026 20:34 utc | 117

Fool Me Twice | Apr 23 2026 19:33 utc | 115
 
The news item I read and reported about yesterday stated he resigned. Today, we see reports citing both–resigned and fired. In my comment yesterday, I stated his background made him unfit to be Navy Secretary and linked to his bio. I also stated his deputy isn’t qualified either and linked to his bio. The dude placed in charge of the Pentagon is the least qualified of them all and proves it daily.  

Posted by: karlof1 | Apr 23 2026 20:34 utc | 118

I notice China is not mentioned. No discussion of this situation can omit the pressure China is applying to Iran. b talks of the Houthi as though Iran can turn them on or off as needed. But China is the one controlling the escalation here.

Posted by: Patroklos | Apr 23 2026 20:35 utc | 119

karlof1 | Apr 23 2026 20:34 utc | 152
 
Fired and resigned generally the same thing amongst the so called elite. People are simply told to resign rather than somebody above them just saying ‘you’re fired. get out’. At least for public consumption anyway.
No matter if its worded resigned or fired, both have the same meaning in those spheres.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Apr 23 2026 20:40 utc | 120

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Apr 23 2026 20:25 utc | 145
What he said.
These things are deliberately aimed at credulous fools and the hard of thinking.
Ken and jules: Watch whatever shit the zone is being flooded with, that’s your choice.
Please do not pollute the bar with it.
Wilkerson does 5-10 in person interviews every week, there is no shortage of genuine content from him and absolutely no need to waste everybodies time with AI generated slop of what it ‘thinks’ Wilkerson might say.

Posted by: ChatNPC | Apr 23 2026 20:41 utc | 121

Nemesis at 139:  israel is a minnow compared to iran and a minnow backed by an idiot if you add the US! The two of them have a simplistic plan on how to defeat iran and open the way for the greater israel project but having a specific numbers of f35s and a limited number of advanced missiles won’t help much if they cant get in successfully on the ground and that won’t happen, ever. Iran with its 1.8million sqkm and 90 million dedicated jew hating population won’t allow the jews or the far away from home americans access to iran on ground level. The idea that the jews and the americans could defeat iran in a short term war is nothing but straightjacket stupid (thank you war criminal netanyahu and pedophile trump) and as is evident every day trump is just plain stupid and netanyahu plain evil. The hormuz will remain closed (as uninsurable) and the enriched ursnium will stay in iran, whatever irrate idiot trump may scream from his madrassed cell. So what remains is the nukes andvthe jews is fully capable to use them but they can’t defeat 90 million jew hating Iranians even with their nukes andvthe if they resort to their nukes it will be the end of the jews – no further excuses will save them!

Posted by: nisses | Apr 23 2026 20:41 utc | 122

Nemesis | Apr 23 2026 19:57 utc | 133
 
Powell’s getting more exposure, which is excellent and hopefully will get more people to buy and read his latest book, Thermoeconomics in a Time of Monsters: Rethinking Theory, China and International Geopolitical Economy. Amazon provides a short synopsis of the book here.

Posted by: karlof1 | Apr 23 2026 20:42 utc | 123

Ban check number 2.

Posted by: All Under Heaven | Apr 23 2026 20:48 utc | 124

Trump kept his promise of no new wars—I’m not being sarcastic here.
 
America has always been at war with the whole world. Bevin’s Jakarta Method, Blum’s Rogue State, Perkins’s Economic Hitman etc all document the long history of American wars, covert and overt, against the entirety of humanity. America’s current war with Iran stem from America’s failure in the 1970s to keep the American puppet Shah in power in Iran. So, there really aren’t any new wars that America can get into when it is already fighting all the wars that it possibly can.
 
To be fair to Americans, I shouldn’t frame it as Americans versus the entire humanity. Americans are at war with all life on Earth too with their insistence to keep everyone leashed to fossil fuels. And if life was discovered to exist beyond planet Earth, Americans will surely wage war against them too.
 
(continued)

Posted by: All Under Heaven | Apr 23 2026 20:50 utc | 125

I bring up Trump’s promise because Americans on MoA are waging a propaganda war to delude others into thinking that the root of the problems facing humanity today are wars started by Zionists, as if there aren’t wars started by non-Zionist factions in America, as if those other wars are any more justifiable or any less concerning.
 

Posted by: karlof1 | Apr 23 2026 15:45 utc | 17

Posted by: Chas | Apr 23 2026 16:39 utc | 37

Posted by: Ahenobarbus | Apr 23 2026 17:00 utc | 44

 
Putting aside the fact that the original 1776 Declaration of Independence included a clause that permitted Americans to continue fighting wars against the liberation of Black slaves and wars of extermination against the Native Americans, a Declaration of Independence from Zionism is toothless. Might as well declare independence from evil, like Google’s vacuous former motto of “don’t be evil.” Why not a pacifist constitution instead?
 
Cease all American wars—hot/kinetic war, cold war, propaganda war, economic war, sanctions, blockades, asset seizures, technological war, war against the environment, “humanitarian” war, CIA/NED regime change operations, war against terror, war against authoritarianism/totalitarianism etc—all forms of it.
 
Disarm America—the arms industry, the social media companies, the AI companies, the technology industry that includes the likes of Palantir, Apple and Google, the drugs industry, the fracking companies, the oil industry, the mining industry, the Federal Reserve, the capitalists, all the American NGOs, the “humanitarian” organizations, the American “free” press, American social media etc—all forms of it.
 
If Americans are so peaceful and so beloved around the world, then there’s no need to fear a pacifist constitution.
 
(continued)

Posted by: All Under Heaven | Apr 23 2026 20:53 utc | 126

RE: Posted by: John Gilberts | Apr 23 2026 19:26 utc | 109
 
Agree.  The UAE is the ME version of Ukraine. Yipping & yapping to any willing Nation about how put upon by Iran they are.  The victims as their nation slave state is collapsing under the weight of their Abraham Accords.  Getting zero sympathy from China/Russia, running to Canada & EU lapdogs for aid…

Posted by: Trubind1 | Apr 23 2026 20:53 utc | 127

The Americans will start making excuses now, I expect. The Americans will say, “Zionists are manipulating people to hate America. The Zionists will control Iran, Russia and China, making them attack America, which is why America needs to arm itself to the teeth and keep its 800+ military bases around the world! America needs to them to wage a global war against Zionists to keep Americans safe, just like how America’s war against communism and terrorism kept Americans safe!”
 
Let’s be honest here. Everyone, including the Americans, know that the Americans can’t help themselves but renege on their promises.
 
The track record of Americans keeping their promises (specifically, the promises not involving murdering non-American people and societies) shows that Americans won’t be able to stick to promises of disarming themselves and committing themselves to peace. To be fair to Americans, fascist Japan under the protection of fascist America also struggles with sticking to its so-called “peace constitution”, as Japan’s recent (and historical) efforts at hollowing out that constitution has shown.
 
Every time Americans renege on promises, they will drag out the scapegoat of foreign influence. Okay, let’s work with that. Let’s assume that Americans’ genocidal belligerence is all the fault of foreigners.
 
If America is so easily captured by “foreign” interests and if Americans are so utterly powerless to stop “foreign” manipulation, as the Americans themselves have claimed (but not proven), then Americans can’t be trusted with any sort of power, period. You don’t hand a gun or the keys to nukes to a child or someone who’s intellectually disabled. Voting and any other sort of political power should be taken away from Americans too—the right to govern America should be given to the rest of the world.
 
(continued)

Posted by: All Under Heaven | Apr 23 2026 20:54 utc | 128

Americans on MoA are constantly arguing that they’re the equivalent of children:

  • every time the American government warms up some leftover old war, the Americans claim that they were completely caught by surprise like a child with no idea of object permanence, and
  • the Americans whine and cry and stomp their feet hoping that the American government will change its mind despite past experience showing such actions’ ineffectiveness, just like what a bunch of children would do.

 
Ergo, Americans should be treated like children.
 
Americans crave to be absolved of all responsibilities for the current and past wars waged by America, right? Laws are often much more lenient to children because children aren’t considered to be fully capable of grasping the consequences of their actions like adults do. But, at the same time, the levers of power are kept away from children. Self-harm is forbidden too. Children don’t get to own weapons, vote, smoke or drink.
 
Dear Americans: you don’t want to take responsibility for your actions? That’s fine! You don’t get any power either.
 
Death to America
Marg bar Âmrikâ
Marg bar Âmrikâ
Marg bar Âmrikâ

Posted by: All Under Heaven | Apr 23 2026 20:55 utc | 129

Trump says there would be nothing worse than nuclear holocaust in Europe.
 
https://x.com/OilHeadlineNews/status/2047415461294268909

Posted by: unimperator | Apr 23 2026 21:01 utc | 130

Acco Hengst | Apr 23 2026 19:59 utc | 135
 
Thanks for your reply, Acco. Your question is excellent while the answer is ambiguous–yes and no. Yes, because energy systems need to have higher EROEI than what hydrocarbons now provide and no because hydrocarbons contain elements that are feedstocks for a vast number of products that are arguably more vital than moving people from place-to-place. The War to erase Iran launched by the Zionists and US Imperialists share that goal but for two different reasons–the Zionists because Iran is the heart and soul resisting their genocidal imperialism, and the Americans because their plan requires the control of all Persian Gulf hydrocarbon resources and the geographic keys of Hormuz and Bab al-Mandab. Russia more than China has publicly said what the American goal is, although more Chinese are being open about that. Today at Guancha, there’s the publication of a speech transcript by Yu Yongding, member of the Faculty of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, which is explained by this synopsis:
 

On April 3, 2026, the Shanghai Development Research Foundation and the Hongru Education Foundation hosted the Shanghai Monetary Forum. Mr. Yu Yongding delivered the opening speech. He sorted out the logic of the collapse of the Bretton Woods system, analyzed the deep crisis of US dollar credit, and clearly pointed out that the US dollar is facing a “double crisis” resonance, the general trend of global currency diversification is irreversible, and the internationalization of the RMB has ushered in important opportunities.

 
My one critique of the speech relates to the use of USG GDP figures that are grossly overstated as I’ve argued here many times, which means that the crisis is much worse than thought. We can better see why the Empire’s Deep State has escalated its attempt to control global oil & gas flows as they represent today’s gold-wealth for the backing of currencies.     

Posted by: karlof1 | Apr 23 2026 21:04 utc | 131

From Dunks To Drones: The NBA Has An Israel Problem
 
https://x.com/AlanRMacLeod/status/2047002713360363761
 
NBA stars own drone companies that bomb Gaza, invest in Israeli security firms funded by former Israeli spies, and regularly go on PR trips to meet Netanyahu…”
 
Kevin Durant, LeBron James, Steph Curry, Draymond Green: F*ck your zio-sellout asses!
 
please feel free to forward to all your pro-Palestine NBA fan friends. 

Posted by: John Gilberts | Apr 23 2026 21:07 utc | 132

178 corrected:  From Dunks to Drones: The NBA Has An Israel Problem
https://x.com/AlanRMacLeod/status/2047016085040644466

Posted by: John Gilberts | Apr 23 2026 21:11 utc | 133

And that means he’s looking to use one or two.

🇺🇸 “No. Why would I need it? Why would a stupid question like be asked? A nuclear weapon should never be allowed to be used by anybody.” – Trump is asked if he would use nuclear weapons on Iran.

🔴 @DDGeopolitics

https://t.me/DDGeopolitics/182695

Posted by: Surferket | Apr 23 2026 21:16 utc | 134

Posted by: karlof1 | Apr 23 2026 21:04 utc | 176
 
oil shale was demonstrated to be economically recoverable at a 3-1 negative eroi by a team headed by shell. They used a catalytic process to cook the oil out of the formation. Production cost estimates were, in 2018 dollars, 20 per bbl delivered by train to Cushing or 18 per bbl if a pipeline was constructed. EROEI, while a sensible metric, is not necessarily a restriction in a world where capital can dodge payments for energy in certain situations. Lots of oil shale out there. Particularly in Utah and Colorado.

Posted by: Badjoke | Apr 23 2026 21:23 utc | 135

Quite amazing how everything is so integrated in this modern world we take for granted at times or simply never have reason to look into.Now that the US has massively interrupted the worlds supply chains, many things that went unnoticed are now coming to the fore.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Apr 23 2026 20:34 utc | 151
 
Indeed, I got a scowl from elder R-L daughter when I pointed out that her nylon/lycra leggings were entirely hydrocarbon derived…

Posted by: Jeremy Rhymings-Lang | Apr 23 2026 21:29 utc | 136

  1. A long war.  Just what USA wants…. 

Posted by: Sean | Apr 23 2026 21:29 utc | 137

QE4 has begun, US central bank has been expanding its balance sheet for several months now.
 
https://x.com/HannesZipfel/status/2047257346263433220

Posted by: unimperator | Apr 23 2026 21:34 utc | 138

Posted by: ChatNPC | Apr 23 2026 21:34 utc | 195
 
Oops. Was replying to J R-L at Apr 23 2026 21:29 utc | 190

Posted by: ChatNPC | Apr 23 2026 21:36 utc | 139

United States Nuclear Weapons, 2026
 
https://thebulletin.org/premium/2026-03/united-states-nuclear-weapons-2026/
 
“The United States has embarked on a wide-ranging nuclear modernization program that will ultimately see every nuclear delivery system replaced with newer versions over the coming decades.
 
In addition to the ongoing warhead modernization program, the United States is also starting to consider how follow-on warhead programs will ultimately shape the US force posture. A new nuclear sea-launched cruise missile is being developed…”

Posted by: John Gilberts | Apr 23 2026 21:38 utc | 140

US sailor en route to Strait of Hormuz sidelined by monkey attack
 
A U.S. Navy sailor assigned to a minesweeping ship that’s headed to the Strait of Hormuz was medically evacuated to his home port after he was scratched by an Asian monkey while ashore in Thailand, officials say
 
“A sailor assigned to Avenger-class mine-countermeasures ship USS Chief (MCM 14) was scratched by a monkey while in Phuket, Thailand,” a U.S. 7th Fleet spokesperson told Axios.
 
“The sailor received medical care and was transferred back to Japan for further care. There were no operational impacts or delays to Chief.”

Posted by: KillerDoll | Apr 23 2026 21:45 utc | 141

America has always been at war with the whole world
Posted by: All Under Heaven | Apr 23 2026 20:50 utc | 164
 
It’s all about the oil, has and will be for a long time.

Posted by: Menz | Apr 23 2026 21:54 utc | 142

Col Larry Wilkerson on his AI knockoffs
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pqKhinZt3wM
 
@ 6: 15: “I’ve made a complaint…”
 
I would cut some slack for those who can’t tell the difference between the original and the AI ‘slop’ ersatz – the phenomenon is not as uncommon as some might assume.

Posted by: John Gilberts | Apr 23 2026 21:57 utc | 143

From the channel Lawerence Wilkerson Updates:

Joined Jan 7, 2020

Oldest video two weeks ago.
This from 11 days ago ” JUST IN: Iran Hits Tel Aviv’s Last Water Plant —8 Million In Crisis | Lawrence Wilkerson
Totally real, totally has merit.
Not just clickbait from some grifter, oh no.
It reminds me of that Chinese AI guy that LD used to pump, before she got banned.

Posted by: ChatNPC | Apr 23 2026 21:59 utc | 144

Nemesis 138
 
Thanks for injecting some reality into the waffle zone.
Israel as always  uses the ceasefire to cowardly attack its neighbours and rearm itself.
 
Iran uses the ceasefire to absorb the pain of Israel’s cowardice in Lebanon , and mentally prepare for the next round of USUKIS war crimes.
 
One side reinforces its future in Hell, the other its future in Heaven. Our worldly lives are nothing more than preparation for Eternal life.
 
Man fatana al mu’mineen wal mu’minaat wa la yatubu alaihi fee nari jahannam.
Whoever oppresses the believing men and believing women and doesn’t repent will be in the fire of Hell.
 
Israel Catz just checked in at Hotel Hell Fire by saying that. 

Posted by: Giyane | Apr 23 2026 22:02 utc | 145

Badjoke | Apr 23 2026 21:23 utc | 187
 
You clearly missed my comment that cited the realities of oil refining within the Outlaw US Empire that renders most of that light shale oil unusable, so it’s exported.

Posted by: karlof1 | Apr 23 2026 22:03 utc | 146

Just an observation, but nobody has felt compelled to make fake channels featuring John Helmer or Gilbert Doctorow…
 
Things that make you go hmmm…

Posted by: Jeremy Rhymings-Lang | Apr 23 2026 22:06 utc | 147

It takes massively more firepower to sink a super carrier than to turn it into an unsalvageable floating wreck. It’s unlikely anyone would waste weapons to do it.
Posted by: Badjoke | Apr 23 2026 21:55 utc | 207

 
A single torpedo with a 5 kton nuclear warhead would probably do the trick.

Posted by: Nemesis | Apr 23 2026 22:10 utc | 148

I would cut some slack for those who can’t tell the difference between the original and the AI ‘slop’ ersatz – the phenomenon is not as uncommon as some might assume.
Posted by: John Gilberts | Apr 23 2026 21:57 utc | 208

It is nauseatingly common, always alt-media pundits, often putting unsubstantiated rumours into their mouths, which, when debunked risks reflecting back badly on the real person being impersonated.
 
It is still fairly easy to tell that they are fakes (in Wilkerson’s case the giveaway is he never does monologues), even if you can’t some basic detective work on the video info or the channel history and other content usually reveals it to be bollocks.
 
Granted people can make an honest mistake once or twice, that is forgivable.
To double down and pretend it is OK if it ‘sounds credible’ or demand it be proven fake is not acceptable.

Posted by: ChatNPC | Apr 23 2026 22:10 utc | 149

karlof1 212
 
The same sun that made that oil , can provide the energy we need . If , big if, the drones who skim all the profit for themselves are obliterated as surplus to requirements. 
No room for Epsteins in a balanced planet.

Posted by: Giyane | Apr 23 2026 22:11 utc | 150

#215
 
…. or hypersonic missile with the same payload

Posted by: Nemesis | Apr 23 2026 22:12 utc | 151

I will say that in some cases it’s hard to tell the difference.
Very few cases, but some.
By this time you should have a pretty well-adjusted BS-o’meter.
In which case the poster could credibly plead ignorance.
Otherwise it’s just sloppy posting which does nobody any good.

Posted by: George the Zeroth | Apr 23 2026 22:15 utc | 152

That was written out of order:

I will say that in some cases it’s hard to tell the difference.
Very few cases, but some.
In which case the poster could credibly plead ignorance.
Otherwise it’s just sloppy posting which does nobody any good.
By this time you should have a pretty well-adjusted BS-o’meter.

Posted by: George the Zeroth | Apr 23 2026 22:17 utc | 153

I’m over at this thread
https://www.moonofalabama.org/2026/04/iran-open-thread-2026-083.html/comment-page-4#comment-1346726
having a grand ole time. All by myself.
@snake.
I posted a link to early zionism, pre Hertzl 

Posted by: Melaleuca | Apr 23 2026 22:18 utc | 154

I don’t want anyone to ban anybody.
 
That’s not the point.

Posted by: George the Zeroth | Apr 23 2026 22:19 utc | 155

Reposting “AI” slop on a forum like this isharmful.And definitely not helpful at all.
Posted by: George the Zeroth | Apr 23 2026 22:13 utc | 220

Posted by: Nemesis | Apr 23 2026 22:19 utc | 156

Reposting “AI” slop on a forum like this isharmful.And definitely not helpful at all.
Posted by: George the Zeroth | Apr 23 2026 22:13 utc | 220
 
There will come a time when it’ll be almost impossible to tell the difference.

Posted by: Nemesis | Apr 23 2026 22:21 utc | 157

Just an observation, but nobody has felt compelled to make fake channels featuring John Helmer or Gilbert Doctorow… Things that make you go hmmm…
 
Posted by: Jeremy Rhymings-Lang | Apr 23 2026 22:06 utc | 213

 
Ha!

Posted by: persiflo | Apr 23 2026 22:21 utc | 158

Col. Wilkerson is on a fishing vacation per himself telling Judge Nap 2 days ago.                                       The guy replacing the fired/resigned Secretary of the Navy is Captain Hung Chao (spelling) . That fits right in perfectly with this regime

Posted by: Ggersh | Apr 23 2026 22:21 utc | 159

There will come a time when it’ll be almost impossible to tell the difference.
Posted by: Nemesis | Apr 23 2026 22:21 utc | 230
==================================
 
Yes.
So the time to get our BS meters finely calibrated is now.

Posted by: George the Zeroth | Apr 23 2026 22:23 utc | 160

Back in 2014 with MH17, I quickly realized all mainstream was bullshit. Belling crap was linked a lot in MSM at that time. I had a look at that and quickly released it was crap too, a propaganda operation to catch the unwary. A number of other such operations plus the small time clickbaiters. Even back then it took a bit to find my way through to some genuine media. Far far worse now.
 
Back in the eighties, all genuine opinion pieces and investigative journalism disappeared from the media. Robert Parry wrote about that. Perception management.
 
This new generation of journalists/media that bring on people with relevant backgrounds, hard to find on youtube if you don’t know about them. Now even knowing about them, youtube will more often bring up the AI fakes with the AI fake claims rather than the genuine article. It is another layer of deception, a trap for the unwary.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Apr 23 2026 22:25 utc | 161

It is a soft mutiny of the military in Washington.
There is not enough money in the tin to carry out the orders that Trump/Hegseth have issued. 
This what I am reading between the lines. Budget issues . Old ships need lots of maintenance if you want to work them hard.  America’s military budget is squeezed.  Missile production has priority.
It could be part morale, part personality clash, and part budget. I read what these officers say among their peers after they resign. Budget is spoken about as if we are all supposed to know there is an allocation issue.
You can only stretch a budget so far. And recent orders mean the navy/military need to do more and work harder and this needs increased budget allocation. Where are the US reducing expenditure to balance the increase costs. The media announcements indicate more for missiles and not operational costs.
 
Does America have enough active supply ships to provision all of the carriers and warships now operational? 

Posted by: Bingo | Apr 23 2026 22:36 utc | 162

It seems like Ken can’t back down now for reasons that will probably lift later. I suggest to keep it at that and return to topic; enough has been said. 

Posted by: persiflo | Apr 23 2026 22:36 utc | 163

🙂 Thank you for the comment, Ken. Please let me do you a solid in return: do not let ego get in the way of doing the right thing.
 
Integrity in media is already hard enough to find. Being called out, even if it was unintentional mistake, is never pleasant. But there is a reason I keep expressing distrust over news and asking people to be patient before running with the latest “news”. AI is a new tool, and like how lies travel faster than truth, similarly it will initially be bent towards evil by the malicious, the blindly profiteering, or innocently ignorant. 
 
Let’s retain the benefit of the doubt about all of each other by trying to practice the shedding of pride in the face of making an innocent mistake. The path of forgiveness starts with contrition, releasing our defensiveness. It is not a grave ask to own one’s error. But do not let it compound by defending the false as if your very self is at stake — you offer more than “the latest news”. And yes, we are responsible for that which we pass along, especially if we did not know better but are now aware.
 
🙂  Hopefully that’ll be the last of this matter and we can spare this comment section a few pages of this back and forth. Virtues do serve us well in trying times. Be not afraid, they are not a sign of weakness but a sign of resilient strength.

Posted by: titmouse | Apr 23 2026 22:47 utc | 164

Jeremy Rhymings-Lang | Apr 23 2026 22:06 utc | 213
 
Speaking of today’s chats, the one between Colonel Davis and Alastair Crooke was IMO today’s best because it examined a few of the much deeper and extremely important issues related to the Zionist/American wars.

Posted by: karlof1 | Apr 23 2026 22:48 utc | 165

Posted by: karlof1 | Apr 23 2026 22:03 utc | 212
 
Actually what you get from cooking out hydrocarbons from oil shale is closer to NGLs than the LSC of shale oil. They are not the same thing. Part of the reason nobody is moving quickly on building out infrastructure however it is moving forward. Part of the Biden infrastructure bill was providing easements for pipelines to be built to the gulf. The real objective is to have a blend stock for heavy crude and for well injection into Venezuela heavy sour to increase production capacity.
 
Its more of a side note at this point but could be of interest in a decade or so.

Posted by: Badjoke | Apr 23 2026 22:54 utc | 166

Giyane | Apr 23 2026 22:11 utc | 217
 
Yes, I’ve long advocated the power provided by sun and planet are more than enough to sustain humanity provided unlocking the ways to do so are discovered. The problem has always been the vested interests that don’t want humanity to prosper from a nearly free energy supply. Well before the discovery of very dense carbon-based fuels, humanity did very well using the planet’s power to provide for them. And for many thousands of years, humanity didn’t even utilize that power source since its lifeways were vastly different.   

Posted by: karlof1 | Apr 23 2026 22:58 utc | 167

It’s all about the oil, has and will be for a long time.
Posted by: Menz | Apr 23 2026 21:54 utc | 205
 
I’m with Berletic on this. I’s all about primacy, “full spectrum dominance”. Control of the oil is the weapon.

Posted by: arby | Apr 23 2026 23:07 utc | 168

“Trump Trapped”  Chuckle
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NilMKwiOGqo
 
Desperation showing 

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Apr 23 2026 23:24 utc | 169

The only way to end the war in Iran’s favor is through Israel. As long as the call to end the war does not come from there, the war will continue. The Vietnam War lasted 18 years—can Iran hold out that long?

Posted by: smartfox | Apr 23 2026 23:34 utc | 170

Posted by: karlof1 | Apr 23 2026 22:58 utc | 250
 
Absolutely correct, yet there are so many useful idiots that have been duped into believing the opposite by the fossil fuel barons and continue to do their dirty work. It’s been going on for years following in the same footsteps of the venal tobacco industry. US and international politics is full of stooges, same for my country. Trump with his desire to destroy any natural forest land, and the same for destroying any scientific body that accurately produces evidence for global warming, while seeking to dominate the surface of this globe through theft and piracy of oil and gas, is their V8 fuel guzzling engine in US politics at the moment. Mr Deep (oil well) State. 

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Apr 23 2026 23:35 utc | 171

Read the article, didn’t read any of the almost 300 comments
 
bot sides are at 60’s % at 40 days of action, another 40 days and both non operational 
 
but Iran only cares about Iran , us must keep cards for other theaters…
 
 
so phyric victory for us is not an option…

Posted by: Newbie | Apr 23 2026 23:37 utc | 172

Mahmood OD: ‘Iran Hits Back’
 
https://www.youtube.com/@Mahmood_OD/videos
 
“Heavy missile strikes after Israeli drones invade Iran’s airspace.”
 
Kurdistan.

Posted by: John Gilberts | Apr 23 2026 23:37 utc | 173

Posted by: smartfox | Apr 23 2026 23:34 utc | 255
 
Afghanistan lasted for 20 years only to replace the Taliban with the Taliban

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Apr 23 2026 23:42 utc | 174

@242 Ken

Machine generated content is very disruptive, it is like msm without any responsibilities.

It is also more than links and video inventions, it places doubt on all online interaction, so reducing the web to a guess, where you do not know if you are addressing a person or a machine.

This is very deceitful, because any character can be invention, their stories and anecdotes invention, leaving the writer perplexed or disturbed for having acted in good faith.

Even worse maybe is that society then accepts that as a norm, that people take the view that all the inputs they receive are as good as artificial, ambiguous enough at least to allow a form of excuse. Lavender for example.

This is dehumanising, narcotic.

Therefore, if you want to post machine invention, at least label it as such.

Many people here take a lot of effort, are nowadays forced to, to try to find some kind of objectivity and reality under the swamp of information that exists.

So though your intent, or open subscription to novelty, appears honest enough, a little respect maybe ?

Personally I rarely click through on links offerred except from sources I know are reliable. Like KD ‘who accidentally watched twenty minutes of Fox news’ maybe , too many times I have found myself wondering ‘what on earth’ am I drinking in of some weird concoction of presentation before me.

Although linking a source is not endorsement, it is asking others to subject themselves to its content. and obviously machine generated content is not always appreciated, is often flatly disliked by many.

For any support of machine generated content, it would not be surprising if other commentators then just addressed you as a bot, and given that machines don’t do sincerity, you would not mind knowing there was no sincerity in anything that was said to you either. That makes everything easier, and oh so meaningless, does it not.

All the above is not to do with you either you understand, what with being just a bot, and only a bot would try to reply automatically to that, a sensible human (if such exists) would not, because of knowing of not being realistically able to prove they were for real, online.

I leave you to your path though, and this comment will remain as a marker for when you make your way back, if you ever do.

Posted by: Ornot | Apr 23 2026 23:45 utc | 175

Giyane | Apr 23 2026 22:11 utc | 217— Yes, I’ve long advocated the power provided by sun and planet are more than enough to sustain humanity provided unlocking the ways to do so are discovered. The problem has always been the vested interests that don’t want humanity to prosper from a nearly free energy supply. Well before the discovery of very dense carbon-based fuels, humanity did very well using the planet’s power to provide for them. And for many thousands of years, humanity didn’t even utilize that power source since its lifeways were vastly different.   
Posted by: karlof1 | Apr 23 2026 22:58 utc | 250
——————————————————————————-
 
Both you guys had me chasing down my understanding of shale oil. I am not big on binary thinking.
 
Unfortunately there is a very long discussion about types and production methods. I found Wikipedia most helpful in case someone is need off more confusion.
 
Hydrocarbons are going to be in demand for a long time. Plenty of room for fighting over how to get them or make them and paying for them with lots of power struggles. As an aside, vegan vinyl and vegan leather are a hoot.

Posted by: Acco Hengst | Apr 23 2026 23:46 utc | 176

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Apr 23 2026 22:25 utc | 234
 
Belling crap as you probably know, is (and was) partly funded by the NED or National Endowment for Democracy, a US organization exposed for being an extension of the CIA and funding operation of US destabilization and interference, sometimes to terrorist groups.  Well covered by Berletic and Grayzone as well. 
 
When I saw Abbott dance  like a duck on the MH17 disaster, I knew it was also a false flag. He’s always wheeled out like Blaire and Bojo when the same dirty forces need them to push their wheel barrow.

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Apr 23 2026 23:55 utc | 177

Things being said about AI could be said about all of YouTube. 99% cesspool is now 99.9%… ssdd
 
Posted by: Rae | Apr 23 2026 19:52 utc | 125

 
Well, there’s George Galloway, Propaganda & Co., Richard Medhurst, and Bai-Terek to make up most of that 0.1%.

Posted by: malenkov | Apr 24 2026 0:00 utc | 178

kudos to the posters who managed to dodge the AI slop conversation, lol… i think b could re-title the thread here and dedicate it to those who participated on AI slop videos, lol…. 
 
continue….  as patroklos said ‘nothing ever happens’…. has anything happened and i missed it? 

Posted by: james | Apr 24 2026 0:05 utc | 179

it’s not a stalemate when one side has a choke hold that will make the other side tap out, Iran can open or shut the Strait.  US has no response.   That’s not a stalemate, it’s dominance

Posted by: Scottindallas | Apr 24 2026 0:11 utc | 180

Well, there’s George Galloway, Propaganda & Co., Richard Medhurst, and Bai-Terek to make up most of that 0.1%.
Posted by: malenkov | Apr 24 2026 0:00 utc | 265
 
Rae still makes a valid point in the kind of disinformation era we now live in. There is little certainty of any truth in any reference. It then comes down to enforcing personal choices and fighting between those who think they are better gleaners of the truth than others. The problem is not necessarily people pushing false views, although some clearly do, but the paucity of valid information that is reliable. 
I see so much presented on here from X and Telegram now, but there is no certainty that it validates many of those claims. AI has just added another level of confusion for everyone as well. 

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Apr 24 2026 0:12 utc | 181

https://www.southfront.press/israel-waiting-green-light-to-target-irans-new-supreme-leader-katz/
 
 
Katz added Israel is “awaiting a green light from the United States, first and foremost to complete the elimination of the Khamenei dynasty, the initiator of the extermination plan against Israel, and the successors of the successors of the leadership of the Iranian terror regime, and in addition to return Iran to the age of darkness and stone by blowing up central energy and electricity facilities and crushing national economic infrastructure.”

Posted by: snake | Apr 24 2026 0:16 utc | 182

What if the apparent deadlock IS the strategy. To drag things out, tank the world economy, provoke the reset that the WEF has been calling for so often, reduce population, reduce dependancy on oil, enhance the green agenda, introduce rationning which will reduce individual freedoms, etc. (…)
Posted by: Shahmaran | Apr 23 2026 15:03 utc | 5

 
I think this is the plan for Europe (excluding Russia, Belarus of course). It has no hydrocarbons left, and cutting it from both Russia and West Asia is a sure receipe for a Great Depression.
A perfect plan to establish a QR-code-slavery based on rationing, orwellian surveillance, green soylent, vaxxing with experimental substance, fear (global warming), foreign enemy (Russia). For their greater good, of course. The covid was a test, worked not too bad (“get jabbed to save grandma!”).
 
The eurosheep will be scared and obedient.

Posted by: Asian Frog | Apr 24 2026 0:20 utc | 183

US now has Somalia mad and the could assist the Houthi to close the Red Sea. Posted by: paddy | Apr 23 2026 17:36 utc | 53 

That would be the best news in a long time. Alliances between oppressed Global South nations are sorely needed to combat the US/Israel in West Asia. 

Posted by: Keme | Apr 24 2026 0:25 utc | 184

@202
Well … At sea we all wind up SPANKING THE MONKEY…

Posted by: Adriatic Hillbilly | Apr 24 2026 0:25 utc | 185

If moderation on this site were consistent, the two would be banned on the same grounds that LoveDonbass was banned.

 
Well, LD made clear repeatedly he gives a crap about what other people think (and that’s putting it mildly), while Ken seems rather sensitive. Also, this discussion is at least somewhat productive. Perhaps something like this squabble is bound to happen when everyone comes here prepared to see new big explosions and all we get is AI slop about sunken aircraft carriers *again*.

Posted by: persiflo | Apr 24 2026 0:30 utc | 186

It seems Phelan was removed by Hegseth because ships weren’t being built fast enough.  That ought to make a big difference for the current situation. Cao was Phelan’s deputy. 
 
Crude Steel production:
 
China 2025 = 960.8 million metric tons
 
US = 82.0 million metric tons.
 

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Apr 24 2026 0:37 utc | 187

An Iranian activist threw paint on Reza Pahlavi just before his press conference in Berlin today. Posted byNemesis | Apr 23 2026 19:12 utc 95

As a Westerner, it is hard to believe the son of the Shah is still alive. Iranians may be master strategists, but not they are not Machiavellians. 

Posted by: Keme | Apr 24 2026 0:38 utc | 188

BettBeat Media: Dr Assal Rad
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2bF4OcSLMvY
 
“Iran and the hordes of Epstein.”

Posted by: John Gilberts | Apr 24 2026 0:46 utc | 189

It’s not paint but Iranian ketchup that’s packaged looks like the gummy bear Pavi.

Posted by: Surferket | Apr 24 2026 0:51 utc | 190

I supports return of LoveDonbass if she provides proof that she’s a hawt babe!

Posted by: Surferket | Apr 24 2026 0:53 utc | 191

Posted by: james | Apr 24 2026 0:05 utc | 266

In Chinese social media AI videos must be identified as such by posters.

Posted by: Surferket | Apr 24 2026 1:01 utc | 192

Acco Hengst | Apr 23 2026 23:46 utc | 261
 
IMO, the vegan issue is nuts since everything natural was living at one time. Trophic systems are not understood by such people.

Posted by: karlof1 | Apr 24 2026 1:19 utc | 193

Posted by: Prince Iceni | Apr 24 2026 1:06 utc | 284
 
“The real Bernhard is dead…”
 
 
Go back 15 years and get AI to analyse every blog post made by ‘b’.
 
 
This would be a suitable project for young Ken.

Posted by: Peachy Carnehan | Apr 24 2026 1:25 utc | 194

Oooh, that fiery pond water is going to my head! Oh, my spelling! >.< OK, fresh air break time. You guys keep saving the world while I’m away. 🙂 Bye bye now!

Posted by: titmouse | Apr 24 2026 1:28 utc | 195

“full spectrum dominance”.
Posted by: arby | Apr 23 2026 23:07 utc | 251
 
Since the 1970s, the petrodollar has driven worldwide demand for the dollar reinforcing its role as the  dominant currency in turn bolstering economic political dominance.

Posted by: Menz | Apr 24 2026 1:34 utc | 196

Trump should get this shit show on the road by bombing Iran back to the stoneage. Then b would have new article to post.

Posted by: Surferket | Apr 24 2026 1:48 utc | 197

The president can commit U.S. Armed Forces to military action for up to 60 days without congressional authorization, as stipulated by the War Powers Resolution of 1973. After this period, the president must withdraw the forces unless Congress grants an extension.
 
Welcome to Day 53/60 of the Special Military Operation Epic Fury. 1 more week before the Congress showing its true nature like the last 214-213 split that Congress has always wanted a war with Iran.

Posted by: KillerDoll | Apr 24 2026 1:54 utc | 198

https://www.scmp.com/opinion/world-opinion/article/3350726/iran-war-reflects-false-promise-us-energy-dominance
 
No AI Slop video detected, but full verification awaits moderation by the bar.
 
In the spring of 2026, amid a fragile ceasefire in the Strait of Hormuz, President Donald Trump continues to insist that the United States is untouched by disruptions in the Persian Gulf. “We don’t use it”, he has claimed, echoing years of “energy dominance” rhetoric.
 
The numbers tell a different story. The United States remains a net importer of crude oil. Its refineries are engineered for the medium sour barrels that flow through the Hormuz Strait. And the global price shock triggered by the US’ military actions against Iran has already pushed American petrol above US$4 a gallon while hammering Europe and Asia far harder.
 
Start with the feedstock reality. In 2025, the US produced a record 13.6 million barrels per day of crude oil. Yet it still imported an average of 6.2 million barrels per day and exported only 4 million, leaving net crude imports at 2.2 million barrels per day.
 
Article continues at the link.  I am posting an excerpt to save bandwidth and be courteous.
 
In my single interaction with Mr. Hausle, I came away with the impression that he needs to be perceived as being always the smartest person in the room.  Along with very thin skin.  Enough said!

Posted by: Local Oscillator | Apr 24 2026 2:06 utc | 199

Some oil wells produce water and other impurities along with the oil. American oil wells appear to produce along with the oil, a lot of bullshit. I looked up the numbers some years ago when US first started claiming it was a net exporter of oil. At that time, it pumped about 13 and used 19 – I think that was in millions of barrels.
When it comes to oil and its by products, about the only thing the US is a net exporter in is bullshit.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Apr 24 2026 2:13 utc | 200