Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
May 13, 2026
War On Iran: – U.S. Experiencing Price Increases

The stalemate in the War of Iran is characterized by bets on each side that the enemy side will soon incur unsustainable economic problems.

After several wars and decades of sanctions Iran is well versed in how to sustain under economic pressure. Its people and government know of the larger picture. Price fluctuations are inconveniences but do not change the will of the people.

The U.S. on the other side is rather fragile. Even only mildly unconformable circumstances will lead to political pressure. One percent more or less of inflation will change the election chances for this or that party.

The consequences of the blockade of Hormuz are starting to come in:

US inflation jumps to 3.8% as energy costs surge from Iran warBBC

US prices rose in April at their fastest rate since May 2023 as the impact of the war in Iran was increasingly felt by consumers.

A jump in the cost of gasoline and groceries pushed the consumer price index (CPI), showing the rate prices rose by in the past 12 months, to 3.8%.

It is the highest level since inflation hit 4% three years ago.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) said almost half of the rise was driven by surging energy costs, while housing and food costs also contributed.

Consumer inflation can be a short term trend. More worrying than the rise in the CPI is the increase of input prices as reflected in the Producer Price Index (PPI):

Wholesale inflation jumps 6% in April on annual basis, biggest increase since 2022CNBC

Wholesale prices in April posted their highest annual increase in more than three years, signaling more nettlesome inflation as pipeline costs intensify.

The producer price index rose a seasonally adjusted 1.4% for the month, much higher than the 0.5% Dow Jones consensus forecast and the upwardly revised 0.7% March increase, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Wednesday. This was the largest monthly gain since March 2022.

On an annual basis, the index was up 6%, the biggest increase since December 2022.

Energy was at the root of the unexpectedly high gain in producer prices, as it was for a surge in consumer prices that the BLS reported Tuesday, though there was evidence that the price pain is extending beyond the gas pump.

Each of the goods missing due to the blockade of the Strait will lead to price increases. Some increases, like those for refined petroleum products – gas and diesel, will show up immediately. Lack of others products, like naphtha, sulfur and urea, will take several months to be felt.

Soon products will start to vanish from stores. Lubricants, like motor oil and grease, are candidates. Several of the myriads of plastics we are used to use will soon be missing.

What are you going to do if waste bags are missing?

Each lack of a product has its own consequence, sometimes in unexpected places. Here its is the housing market in Japan from where trouble might well flow into financial markets:

Hormuz closure stalls construction projects as material costs soar (archived) – FT

Masatomi Maeda, chair of Hiroshima-based Maeda Housing, said about a quarter of its projects have been delayed within the past month as suppliers could not confirm delivery dates for goods including PVC piping, insulation materials and prefabricated bathrooms.

Builders say the absence of a single part, adhesive or material is enough to hold up an entire project.

“We have around 20 contracted projects that we can’t start work on smoothly,” said Maeda. “We already expect completion payments to be delayed by two or three months. If two months of sales disappear, I think there will be companies who won’t have enough working capital.”

Yoshihide Kimura, chief executive of Toyama-based contractor Tomiso, said that emails and faxes poured in last month notifying him of “extraordinary” increases. PVC prices, for example, jumped as much as 70 per cent, he said.

Kimura said that his firm could not pass on the costs to customers, as they would need to renegotiate housing loans, and the uncertainty was causing customers to hold back.

“Everyone feels stuck,” he said.

Even if the Strait would reopen tomorrow it would take twelve to eighteen months for oil wells to be pumped again, storages to be refilled and production chains to go back to normal. As the conflict is likely to re-ignite we can expect years of supply problems.

Today’s increase of CPI and PPI numbers is just the beginning of larger increases in the cost of living.

Comments

You’ve got to hand it to Margaret Thatcher. 
 
Her speeches comparing a monetarily sovereign government to a housewife managing the household budget were so fiendishly effective they could have made Edward Bernays blush.
 
It’s a testament to the powers of persuasion that even to this day, you will hear people lamenting the government for maxing out the credit card or some such.
 
They will demand public services be cut, pensions reduced, health provisions restricted even to their own detriment. 
 
However, if we examine the situation on those terms, a different picture emerges:
 
Let’s compare the UK economy to the average British household budget. 
 
Uk GDP is around £2.5 trillion. UK debt to GDP is around 95% and interest repayments on that debt amount to around 3.7% of GDP.
 
Now let’s compare that to the household budget as promulgated by Margaret Thatcher. 
 
For example:
 
Brian and his wife earn £50,000 each per year (100,000). They find a small house for £300,000. They have a good credit score and approach their bank. The bank agrees to lend them 3 times (£7.5 trillion government equivalent) their combined income at 5%. They have a regular capital and interest mortgage so assuming they will eventually pay off the mortgage and even if there was no capital gain, they would realise the full capital amount. 
 
So let’s look at the interest. 5% on £300,000=£15000 per year. £15000 is 15% of their combined (£100,000) income, £1250 interest per month. It’s’s clear from this example, using the household budget example, that the comparison to UK government debt is wildly off the mark. 
 
In fact, using the Government debt analogy, Brian and his wife, using the 3.7% figure relating to UK government debt repayment would only pay £11,100 per annum, £925 per month, a saving of over £27 per month.
 
It’s clear according to this example that the Thatcher housewife analogy puts the government in a better financial position than the average Joe. 
 
And that’s assuming that Brian and his wife haven’t put down a 10% deposit and have an AA credit rating equivalent to the UK government. 
 
I say this not as an apologist for the system, the status quo. It’s been said many a time that the rich get richer while the poor get poorer. Why is that?
 
I knew a few City spives back in the day. One guy in particular comes to mind. Bloke came from a family of scrap metal dealers in the East End. I knew him from old and I used to meet up with him at a burger van in Ilford. Back then he was driving an old battered Transit pickup with coils of copper on the back.
 
Didn’t see him for a few years but to my surprise I bumped into him at McDonald’s, Beckton after the so-called big bang. I actually couldn’t believe my eyes. There he was, sitting in his Bentley Continental, done up to the nine’s, suited and booted like a seedy nightclub doorman. 
 
I recognised him instantly and went up to the Bentley. He was seated, layed back like a gangster blasting Coolio out of the upgraded Kenwood sound system. Yes, I was fully aware it was a top of the range Kenwood system. He made sure of that. 
 
We got chatting about the old days but it was obvious he’d moved on from then. After a while, he offered to buy me whatever I wanted from the menu, for old times sake. I took a seat outside the drive thru and watched him roll up to the hatch, Gangster Paradise blasting out loud. 
 
I met him in the car park. By now, an old Ford Escort XR3i with a full company of young women (I won’t say b!mb○s) had pulled up right next to him. But fair play, he did give me the burgers and we carried on our conversation. 
 
In the end, it came down to money. I asked him how he managed it? How he came from such humble backgrounds?
 
I’d never considered him to be a man of literature, but his response was indeed Shakespearean:
 
“Does the miller not come home coverd in flour?”
 
I’ll always remember that day. That’s when I first started looking into the system. That’s when I realized I’d been had! 
 
I don’t begrudge my old mate. He was a competent player in his down to earth market and he saw the opportunities from a perspective I was unaware of. 
 
I realized I’d been fooled. And I determined never to be fooled again!
 
https://youtube.com/results?sp=mAEA&search_query=won%27t+get+fooled+again

Posted by: lachaussette | May 13 2026 16:40 utc | 1

Dimitris Lascaris has a YouTube up that suggests that some people are fine and dandy with Hormuz being closed … that, in fact, it will help the development of the India-GCC-Israel Corridor …. so maybe Iran won’t have the leverage needed to prevent USrael  from waging continuing illegal war against it … !

Posted by: Kaos Butters | May 13 2026 16:53 utc | 2

The spice must flow…..thanks for the civilization war posting b
 
Everything is everything on spaceship earth and the God Of Mammon cult is feeling threatened by China/Russia/Iran that think that private finance and oligarchs need to be subservient to sovereign nations.
 
The question is, how to impede moves in that direction?
The answer is to crash world economies ASAP in order to lock in global private finance structure and pieces across the world as part of the rebuild/finance process.
 
Trump is the perfect Hollywood front man for this effort, who would ever suspect it is about anything but his ego?

Posted by: psychohistorian | May 13 2026 16:54 utc | 3

Thanks for this. Yep. Like it or not, reality bites…
 
Critical Perspectives: Fiorella Isable: Juliam Kassem
 
https://www.youtube.com/@CriticalPerspectivesPod
 
“The final battle: Iran’s will vs the US-Israeli alliance.”
 
And Lebanon.

Posted by: John Gilberts | May 13 2026 16:59 utc | 4

@2
 
Alexandria is the better Mediterranean port.
 
That is if there is a GCC

Posted by: paddy | May 13 2026 17:04 utc | 5

Money becomes less valuable as every single product price increases. I wonder how many people within the imperial core will die because of their living cost is within the Kill Zone especially the retired folks with meager government checks.
 
Trump truly abandoned the US soft power and went hard power too much. The US soft power goes down the drain and resentment is rising because the outer imperial core is fcked with rising cost of living first. Thanks to Trump, Every institution and government have to reevaluate their relationship with the USA. Taiwan is wondering if the US would defend it. NATO is considering whether the US will involve in NATO Security or will NATO have to fight the US over Greenland.

Posted by: KillerDoll | May 13 2026 17:05 utc | 6

4 – typo:  should be Julia Kassem

Posted by: John Gilberts | May 13 2026 17:05 utc | 7

KillerDoll@6:
 
“…retired folks with meager government checks.”
 
That’s me. Can’t wait to find out. 

Posted by: John Gilberts | May 13 2026 17:09 utc | 8

the corner store is selling a dozen eggs for $10.99

Posted by: annie | May 13 2026 17:11 utc | 9

Earlier today Copper hit an all time high.
 
https://www.google.com/search?q=copper+all+time+high&udm=14
 
The price of copper will make its way downstream.
 

Posted by: too scents | May 13 2026 17:12 utc | 10

Ok, but does it matter to the people to whom it should matter in the US? Well, the lay of the land: one part feels the pinch at the stores and the pump but just shrugs and takes it up the wallet, another part feels the pinch but sees his 401k and shrugs it off, yet another part doesn’t feel anything because their wealthy and getting wealthier.
Now, how will each react once manipulations can’t keep up with reality: the first see himself in financial danger but doesn’t protest and just keep taking it until he is in public assistance after losing his job and perhaps becomes homeless, the second guy sees that his 401k reverse back to the high before the attack on Iran and shrugs off but gets blasted when his portfolio explodes lower, the third guy doesn’t care because he’s with the people that ran the market up and sold the top and pulled the rug.
Welcome to america. Decades of capitalist brainwashing is paying off. Any normal society would have dismantled the government and chipped the heads off of the oligarchs, but Americans are dumb.

Posted by: Unsafe Data | May 13 2026 17:19 utc | 11

A Small Displaced Family On Their Way To Beirut…
 
https://x.com/HalaJaber/status/2054550259783602343
 
“Israel targeted their car with two bombs, setting it ablaze. There were burned alive inside it…”
 
Please let me live long enough to see the death of USrael.

Posted by: John Gilberts | May 13 2026 17:22 utc | 12

“…retired folks with meager government checks.” That’s me. Can’t wait to find out. 
Posted by: John Gilberts | May 13 2026 17:09 utc | 8
Me too John.
I live in the woods though. No more frozen salmon patties. More deer meat and acorn flour.
 

Posted by: migueljose | May 13 2026 17:28 utc | 13

McChicken used to be 1.50$ now is 5$ at McDonald’s in my location. xD I can’t wait until I see the bill for the next grocery price after the next harvest when all the new costs like fertilizer,gas, labor, etc DOUBLE.
 
My gas tank used to hold 75$ now it’s 100$. The gas price Isreali high for my Camry Iran.

Posted by: KillerDoll | May 13 2026 17:29 utc | 14

Have you heard of “Operation Sledgehammer”?
Appears that the entire world will have, soon.
 

Posted by: Otto Penn | May 13 2026 17:31 utc | 15

Pentagon admits loss of 39 aircraft during operation Epstein Fury.
 
https://x.com/TheCradleMedia/status/2054522747238170643

Posted by: unimperator | May 13 2026 17:32 utc | 16

Is Trump hinting at something?

Operation Sledgehammer was an Allied plan for a cross-Channel invasion of Europe during World War II, intended to establish a Second Front against Nazi Germany in 1942. However, it was ultimately rejected by British officials as impractical, leading to the focus on Operation Torch instead.

Posted by: Otto Penn | May 13 2026 17:33 utc | 17

Posted by: Unsafe Data | May 13 2026 17:19 utc | 12
 
Yes, prices may rise, some will suffer, but the us will still get served.
 
Now for something more sinister, a 30% drop in fertilizer availability, those that can, will pay more, those that can’t will buy as many dollars in fertilizers as before, less, say 40% drop?
 
That should, roughly have a 10-15% drop in produced calories. 2/3 of the original amount will go to those who pay (including almost half to waste), but the poorer 5 billion? Instead of splitting 33% between them, you now split 20% of the original calories.
 
And even there it will be uneven, not everyone will lose 1/3, some will lose little, others will plain starve.
 
Starving people do massive migrations, wars and revolutions…

Posted by: Newbie | May 13 2026 17:43 utc | 18

Re: Kaos Butters #2
 
News item 17 Dec. 2019 … 😊
 

The corridor is yet another policy emerging from Israel with which it seeks to augment and institutionalize its alliance with the GCC. More specifically, it is another one of the ideas borne of the top-heavy Israel-GCC alliance, ‘managed’ thus far by the notorious White House de-facto ‘advisor’ and ardent Zionist Jared Kushner’s personal rapport with the Saudi Crown Prince, Mohammed bin Salman (MbS).

Posted by: Oui | May 13 2026 17:45 utc | 19

We are in a obesity crisis and a lot of Americans can shed a few dozen pounds when the food price increases.

Posted by: KillerDoll | May 13 2026 17:46 utc | 20

Pentagon admits loss of 39 aircraft during operation Epstein Fury. https://x.com/TheCradleMedia/status/2054522747238170643
Posted by: unimperator | May 13 2026 17:32 utc | 17
 
39 for roughly 39 days of operations… (and an extra 10 severely damaged)
 
The sortie attrition ratio of 0,3% is not high, but it was mostly standoff work, plain bombing would bump that a magnitude or more…

Posted by: Newbie | May 13 2026 17:48 utc | 21

US petrochemical producers and fertilizer industry is racking up the cash. 
 
US PPI index hit 11.7% in April 2022, it could go a bit higher this time, the new baseline for 2028 and beyond could be 4-5%, in contrast to 2-4% seen in previous years after it falls from highs. 
 
A whole lot of people will suddenly feel quite a lot poorer when it finally subsides.

Posted by: unimperator | May 13 2026 17:49 utc | 22

What is all this doing to the price of beer? That is all MAGA cares about.

Posted by: CeaClearly | May 13 2026 17:51 utc | 23

Americans and Europeans deserve the impoverishment their leaders have created for them. The rest of the world does not. Unfortunately, the rest of the world is incapable of uniting to oppose the hegemony of the West and has to wait for the denouement of  the West’s decline and relinquishment of the colonial exploitation enriching the bourgeoisie. The American and European working classes have also been unable to unite to overthrow their elites, fooled by the propaganda of ethnic nationalism which informs their subjectivity to the nihilism of supremacy. 

Posted by: Keme | May 13 2026 17:52 utc | 24

The Israeli-ordered-war will continue unless, Trump [and his inner circle] is stopped by 3LA operatives.  The question being, does the National Security State have a tiny vestige of self-respect or, are they just all-in Israeli-hired-whores using the American flags like seven veils in a bizarre rendition of a dance that Salome did before King Herod. 

Posted by: S Brennan | May 13 2026 17:52 utc | 25

Posted by: Keme | May 13 2026 17:52 utc | 25
Yes, but the globalize economy means that the suffering (lack of food, social unrest) will mostly be among the poorest in the world. The people in countries that had least to do in causing it. It will create a huge economic and diplomatic vacuum, and China will most likely serve as backstop for those.

Posted by: Unsafe Data | May 13 2026 18:00 utc | 26

What is all this doing to the price of beer? That is all MAGA cares about.
Posted by: CeaClearly | May 13 2026 17:51 utc | 24

https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/BUD/
Trump’s favorite Beer stock is the highest it has been since 2019.

Posted by: Otto Penn | May 13 2026 18:05 utc | 27

too scents | May 13 2026 17:12 utc | 11
 
My horde of 95% copper pennies are now worth 4x their face value and climbing.
 
As for the rate of inflation, western government reports always understate the actual rate, which is why I posted the % increase in fuel prices as a contra-indicator as they’re well over 50% in many regions and nations. What I found alarming was this chart about farmers inability to pay for proper fertilizer amounts. 

Posted by: karlof1 | May 13 2026 18:06 utc | 28

What I found alarming was this chart about farmers inability to pay for proper fertilizer amounts. 
 
Posted by: karlof1 | May 13 2026 18:06 utc | 29
 

 
US Farm journals and web periodicals are panicked.   Farm bankruptcies are rampant and rising.
 
Then there is the weather outlook.  Dry.
 
Weekly Weather and Crop Bulletin  ==>  https://www.usda.gov/sites/default/files/documents/wwcb.pdf
 

Posted by: too scents | May 13 2026 18:13 utc | 29

Newbie 22 – so how many aircraft did the IDF lose in the same combat theater of operations?
 
Just asking for a Palestinian friend !

Posted by: tobias cole | May 13 2026 18:18 utc | 30

What is all this doing to the price of beer? That is all MAGA cares about.
 
Posted by: CeaClearly | May 13 2026 17:51 utc | 24

 
No, that would be the price of gasoline.
 
Up until now cost increases in the price of beer have been caused mostly by increases in the price of transportation (=diesel) and aluminum. Guess where most of the aluminum comes from. Because the beer ingredients are almost always domestically produced, it’ll be a few months before they drive price increases. 

Posted by: malenkov | May 13 2026 18:26 utc | 31

Posted by: Unsafe Data | May 13 2026 18:00 utc | 27

The devastation of the Global South’s people because of my country’s war making makes me weep, which is why I hope for defeat and advocate communitarian development. 

Then there is the weather outlook.  Dry. Posted by: too scents | May 13 2026 18:13 utc | 30

Polycrisis of drought, other weather disasters, crop failure, inflation-stagflation, defeat in West Asia, techno totalitarianism are in the forecast. 
 
 

Posted by: Keme | May 13 2026 18:33 utc | 32

those with deep pockets benefit from bankruptcies, so there will be more of them under this 1 % ruling oligarch at present…. 
 
the value of money goes down as the value of everything else goes up… more people are living on the streets or have been homeless for a longer time… ain’t capitalism grand?? 
 
the question i ask is this an intentional takedown of the system to push a more complete destruction of the middle class, or what might be left of it??  i can’t tell… all i know is trump is a madman and our own PMC carney is doing everything by the book to ensure the epstein class continues unabated… 
 
thanks for the post b and for the various comments from others.. 

Posted by: james | May 13 2026 18:39 utc | 33

“The U.S. on the other side is rather fragile. Even only mildly unconformable circumstances will lead to political pressure.”
The core difference is citizen support for their government.  Iran, despite all its challenges, has a coherent world view accepted by most of its citizens (moreso than ever now that Zio Imperialism has openly embraced the role of genocidal maniac on the world’s stage).  The people of Iran are with it their government through thick or thin.  They understand it and see its plan for the future which provides some hope through the suffering.  In other words, it is rational.  
On the other hand, we have the government of the United States, which now horrifies most of its citizens, who stoically focus on their personal lives and families and other things they perceive they still have some control of.  When even that small space of control and rationality is definitively taken away by the blundering of the ruling class Zio Imperialists and their endless losing crusades of horror, the stoic posture of the citizenry will become unsustainable. Yes, the Dems will trot out some cosmetic campaign to bring everyone back onboard, but that will be difficult if not impossible in the wake of their open support for genocide and the war on Iran.  
The end of the Zio Imperialist era is nigh upon us!  

Posted by: Ahenobarbus | May 13 2026 18:50 utc | 34

too scents | May 13 2026 18:13 utc | 30
 
Late May is when our Farmer’s Markets here in Oregon start opening for business, and I anticipate asking them about their decisions. Many producers are organic and thus won’t use unnatural fertilizers since green manurers are readily available and grown as off-season cover crops. Our weather was usual, although the many atmospheric rivers that drenched us didn’t provide us with the same massive snowpack we had last year. Most price rises at groceries I’ve noted are for processed foods that I don’t buy. And restaurants are much more expensive. IMO, Winter will provide the food inflation proof.

Posted by: karlof1 | May 13 2026 18:50 utc | 35

The Israeli-ordered-war will continue unless, Trump [and his inner circle] is stopped by 3LA operatives. The question being, does the National Security State have a tiny vestige of self-respect or, are they just all-in Israeli-hired-whores using the American flags like seven veils in a bizarre rendition of a dance that Salome did before King Herod. 
 
Posted by: S Brennan | May 13 2026 17:52 utc | 26
All whores and they all, including the Dems, want the war on Iran and take orders directly from Israel or Israel affiliated American billionaires.  

Posted by: Ahenobarbus | May 13 2026 18:53 utc | 36

Late May is when our Farmer’s Markets here in Oregon start opening for business
 
Posted by: karlof1 | May 13 2026 18:50 utc | 36
 

 
Are you in the Valley or West of the Coast Range?
 

Posted by: too scents | May 13 2026 18:54 utc | 37

What is all this doing to the price of beer? That is all MAGA cares about.
 
Posted by: CeaClearly | May 13 2026 17:51 utc | 24
Oh yes.  The voters of the Imperialist genocidal Democratic Party are just so much better aren’t they?  
Partisan politics between two Imperialist parties always serves Zio Imperialism.  You’re doing it consciously or your a fool.  

Posted by: Ahenobarbus | May 13 2026 18:56 utc | 38

Warned you all months ago…..Hard Times a Comin‘
1) da‘ wife and I spent a few hundred dollars buying excess inventory of items when they were on sale. We focused on imported items such as coffee beans, soaps, washing powder, toorhpaste. We live in dairy farm cpuntry so foodstuffs aren‘t a concern although we have spent more effort firming up our biying habits with local ( organic ) farmers for milk products, eggs, and meat. 
2) practice car lite or car free mobility. You‘ll be glad you did when gasoline hits $10/US gallon. 
3) get a little little plug and play Solar PV system that people use for camping, enough power to run the fridge, a few lights, and charge phones. These cost between $250 and $1,000 dependinh on how much power and battery you think you need. 
 
4) heating during winter; figure that out
 
5) veggie garden (collect rainwater in old trashcans that you scrounge around for free) 

Posted by: Exile | May 13 2026 18:59 utc | 39

Inflation and the government’s understatement of it are strategic. Inflation rewards borrowers (loans are repaid in devalued currency) and punishes savers.
 
The rampant inflation of assets over the past 20 years, due to QE and low interest rates, created valuation distortions that were never seen before. So rather than massively deflate assets, as happened in the great depression, the game is to inflate everything else while the nominal value of assets drops only slightly. That avoids a deflationary spiral in assets.
 
Rising oil prices are perfect because they increase the price of just about everything.
 
All this to buy time (and public compliance) for the Great Reset, currently scheduled for the end of this decade.

Posted by: Fool Me Twice | May 13 2026 19:07 utc | 40

The U.S. Senate has rejected a bill that would have required congressional approval before any military action against Iran, failing by a narrow 50-49 vote. This marks the seventh failure this year.
 
https://t.me/GeoPWatch/33210
 

Posted by: too scents | May 13 2026 19:13 utc | 41

Shadowstats is a respected website with alternative measures of inflation, GDP growth, unemployment, etc. 
https://www.shadowstats.com

Posted by: Exile | May 13 2026 19:14 utc | 42

see what the commies have done to the world??? they have so ruined the planet that communism is the only answer. those commie bastards. I hate them so much. 
 
just curious if all those CEOs in train with Trump in China are part of Russiagate too. don’t they see how Trump is selling America to Putin???? doesn’t Palantir and Meta and Visa care? at all? 

Posted by: duck n cover | May 13 2026 19:15 utc | 43

I’m old enough to remember when we didn’t have all this bling we have today, made from plastic.   (Remember the 1967 movie The Graduate, when Dustin Hoffman was advised to get into plastics?)
Anyway, beer was in bottles that were returned for deposit, washed and refilled.  Same with soda and milk.  
We didn’t wrap our trash in plastic, we just threw it into barrels.
We used cloth diapers on babies, which we then washed and reused.  The diapers, not the babies, although, come to think of it, we did also wash the babies and keep them.
 
I could go on, but I thought I’d address the fertilizer issue.  I live next to a sewage treatment plant and a couple of weeks ago there were tanker trucks lined up all day, hauling sewage out, I assume to spread on fields.
I haven’t seen that before.  They spread the sewage on the fields around here, but the convoy of tankers going elsewhere was new.  Perhaps someone was thinking ahead.   This was after the US attacked Iran.
They could also go to feedlots, which produce a shitload of shit they could load and use, instead of dumping it into lagoons and rivers.
 
Anyway, life wasn’t actually that difficult.   I think it’s doable, even if an entire generation has grown up not saving or conserving.  They can learn.  Google it.

Posted by: wagelaborer | May 13 2026 19:16 utc | 44

I’m old enough to remember when we didn’t have all this bling we have today, made from plastic.   (Remember the 1967 movie The Graduate, when Dustin Hoffman was advised to get into plastics?)
 
Posted by: wagelaborer | May 13 2026 19:16 utc | 45

 
Curiously, one of my best friends in undergrad school was a real social justice warrior. We used to pull all-nighters in a local diner discussing and writing articles about civil rights and constitutional law.
 
He tolerated, but didn’t quite accept, the risk of my falling victim to the allures of academe…but as for him, he became an executive for Berry Plastics.

Posted by: malenkov | May 13 2026 19:29 utc | 45

Anyway, life wasn’t actually that difficult.  
 
Posted by: wagelaborer | May 13 2026 19:16 utc | 45
 

 
Back then they didn’t have air conditioning.  The rapid population growth in the Southern States would have been unthinkable without air conditioning.  Now whole swathes of the country depend upon A.C.
 
 

Posted by: too scents | May 13 2026 19:31 utc | 46

I think the housing industry is going to be hit hard very soon.. 
 
.
I am seeing “for rent” and “for sale” signs everywhere?  Heard about two persons with good credit denied a loan, and the cost of construction materials is still rising. Once the builders can no longer get construction loans fewer houses will raise rents in areas where place to live demand is high, but it will reduce rent and building costs in areas where place to live demand is low.. or supply is abundant. 
 
.
Lumber concrete insulation, glass and roofing materials are  not only volume dependent they are also twice energy dependent (cost to produce, cost to transport).  The less housing produced the higher the cost even without the increased cost of energy.  Asphalt for roads is energy dependent but most of the money for these jobs comes from government.  

Posted by: snake | May 13 2026 19:49 utc | 47

Re: A/C Southern California
 
Back in the 1960s and 1970s no one who lived within 10 miles of the coast had A/C ; now everyone has it, even those homes one block from the water. 
I have 2 grade school buddies, both of whom live within 1/2 mile of the Pacific Ocean in SoCal. Their wives have the heat turned on in the morning and in the afternoon switch to A/C……..

Posted by: Exile | May 13 2026 19:50 utc | 48

Trump and Israel are Desperate Let’s hope it doesn’t come to this: DH with Johnson:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rXtSuPhl5E0&t=2s

Posted by: Elmer Fudd | May 13 2026 19:51 utc | 49

Kaos Butters @ 2:
 
That pipeline idea relies on Israel’s port in Haifa and the oil kingdoms in the Persian Gulf still being in good shape after the recent hostilities between Iran and the US since 28 February this year. My understanding is that Haifa was targeted last year, and would have been targeted again this year, by Iranian missile and drone attacks. The facilities to receive and load the gas and oil onto tankers from the pipelines must have been severely damaged.
 
The GCC nations need to repair their own infrastructure first so investment in fixing Haifa’s facilities will be low, and I hear that Israel’s economy is not in good shape due to lack of investment and labour shortages.

Posted by: Refinnejenna | May 13 2026 20:01 utc | 50

Yes, life is more pleasant with air conditioning, but we can live without it.  I also grew up in southern California, so of course we didn’t have air conditioning.   When it got too hot we went outside and sat in the shade.  Grown-ups went outside and socialized with the neighbors.  When I moved to the Bay Area as an adult, I never had air conditioning there either.  But you do get to know your neighbors.
I now live in southern Illinois.  It’s not the deep south, but it gets hot.  I only got air conditioning in 2011.   When the house became unbearable I went outside and sat under a tree.  Of course, around here, you get chiggers that way.   Still, it is doable.
Turning the heat on in the morning and the AC in the afternoon is just stupid.   I’m guessing stupidity will be schooled.
 
My daughter is trying to sell her house in Austin, Texas.  Good plan, because without electricity it will suck.  Anyway, the house is in a great, tree-lined neighborhood, with great neighbors, and a nature preserve across the street.
Why is no one even looking?  Because real estate speculators just keep building new houses on speculation, even though the traffic is already horrendous, and the water supply is scarce. 
That is the logic of capitalism.   A nice house built in the 70s is considered disposable, just like everything else, while builders continue razing land and building shoddy houses to sell for half a million.   And if increasing poverty puts a stop to the sprawl, it is announced by the TV talking heads using their sad faces.   “Housing starts are down”, they say mournfully, close to tears.  It’s tragic. /s

Posted by: wagelaborer | May 13 2026 20:05 utc | 51

Posted by: karlof1 | May 13 2026 18:06 utc | 29
 
Africa is also hit hard by the fertilizer issue – availability & price
For far too long, Africa has been paying a heavy price for its heavy reliance on imported fertilizers. […]  In 2022 when the Russia-Ukraine war broke out, the Black sea — a vital artery for the global fertilizer trade — was affected, impacting 28% of the world’s nitrogen, potassium and phosphate fertilizers originating from those two countries. The impact in Africa was swift. There was nearly a 25% dip in fertilizer application, even though Africa’s goal — as part of its ambitious agricultural plans for 2024 — was precisely to increase fertilizer use from 18 kg/ha to 50 kg/ha by 2034. 
 
 
[and now] a major crisis in the Strait of Hormuz — through which 30% of global fertilizer exports pass — has driven up fertilizer prices, with urea now trading between $800 and $900 per ton, up from $493 earlier this year. While efforts such as government subsidies on fuel and fertilizer are introduced to manage this surge, they are merely reactive measures. Price spikes which have reached as high as 30 to –45 percent in many parts of Africa, remain a driving factor and continue to have long-term impacts on agricultural production and, ultimately, on yields. In its March 2026 analysis, AGRA forecasts a decline in yields of up to 12 to 20 percent in some of the continent’s major economies in East and West Africa. 
 
 The Africa Forward Summit must solve Africa’s fertiliser crisis through support for its industrialisation drive | Oxfam in Africa

Posted by: Don Firineach | May 13 2026 20:12 utc | 52

@ Refinnejenna | May 13 2026 20:01 utc | 51
 
i heard they plan on building a whole new set up at haifa port to accomadate the new system.. iran bombing the port was said to help in this respect.. i will see if i can find the source for this.. i believe it is an older substack article from escapekey…

Posted by: james | May 13 2026 20:25 utc | 53

I live next to a sewage treatment plant and a couple of weeks ago there were tanker trucks lined up all day, hauling sewage out, I assume to spread on fields.
I haven’t seen that before.
 
Posted by: wagelaborer | May 13 2026 19:16 utc | 45
 

Pound for pound sewage is much more nutritious than ruminant manure.
I have a grow your own book dating back to the early 70s recommending it as such (with NPKs iirc).

Posted by: ChatNPC | May 13 2026 20:26 utc | 54

Don’t stock up on toilet paper this time.
 
Buy a bidet instead!

Posted by: Mark Mosby | May 13 2026 20:29 utc | 55

here is escapekeys latest on this pipeline.. from yesterday..
 
Ratified by G20
 
here is the article from april 3rd, where i first read of this –
 
Railways for Regional Peace
What Is Being Built
 
it is sort of heavy reading and i couldn’t find the specific quote i was looking for… read if interested… 
 
 

Posted by: james | May 13 2026 20:32 utc | 56

@ ChatNPC | May 13 2026 20:26 utc | 54
 
the japanese have been using human waste as fertilizer  (doing this) for a very long time… 

Posted by: james | May 13 2026 20:34 utc | 57

too scents | May 13 2026 18:54 utc | 38
 
I’m on the ocean in Yachats where we got a half-inch of rain early this morning followed by brilliant sunshine and a somewhat quiet ocean.

Posted by: karlof1 | May 13 2026 20:35 utc | 58

Anywhere near the gulf coast of the US is pretty much uninhabitable without A/C. I mean, sure, hanging around under trees is nice and all if you can handle the bugs, but many people have jobs they have to go to at some point. That means somehow getting some sleep in on those typical sweltering nights where the humidity is so thick you have to cut out chunks of air and chew it up to get it into your lungs. When there are prolonged power outages (from hurricanes or such disasters) people literally die from the heat. They haul the bodies out of the senior homes by the dozens. Not pretty.

Posted by: William Gruff | May 13 2026 20:38 utc | 59

Exile | May 13 2026 19:14 utc | 43
 
Unfortunately, Shadowstats hasn’t published anything since 2023.

Posted by: karlof1 | May 13 2026 20:38 utc | 60

various on sewage as fertilizer
 
Unfortunately all that good sewage is contaminated with pharmaceuticals. And plenty of other contaminants. If you can find Amish manure go for it. Otherwise best left alone.
 
Sewage fertilizer one of those bright ideas from the 70s that just did not pan out.

Posted by: oldhippie | May 13 2026 20:41 utc | 61

@ oldhippie | May 13 2026 20:41 utc | 61
 
i imagine chicken manure, and pig manure would be the same.. maybe horse manure is the best anyway and free of the additional pharma ad ons..

Posted by: james | May 13 2026 20:43 utc | 62

Journalist Suhaib Al-Masalma

– “Netanyahu’s office:

In the midst of Operation Lion’s Roar, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made a secret visit to the United Arab Emirates and met with the President of the Emirates, Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed.

This visit led to a historic breakthrough in relations between Israel and the UAE.”

– “Netanyahu visited the Israeli city in the Gulf called (the United Arab Emirates).

Note that Netanyahu is classified by the International Criminal Court as a war criminal and is banned from entering 90% of Western and European countries and is prohibited from even using the airspace of these countries.”

– “Iran’s message to the United Nations: We categorically reject the UAE’s allegations that Iran launched missiles and drones towards its territory” [Presumably during ceasefire]

– “Reuters:

Saudi Arabia launched raids inside Iraq against Iranian-backed militias during the war in the Middle East”

– “Wall Street Journal: The Pentagon seeks to acquire 10,000 low-cost cruise missiles within 3 years amid fears of a decline in the US munitions stockpile”

– “Trump describes Venezuela as the 51st state”

Posted by: Ornot | May 13 2026 20:44 utc | 63

Netanyahu’s secret visit to UAE during the Iran war leads to a breakthrough, his office says
The announcement came just a day after the U.S. ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee revealed that Israel had sent Iron Dome air-defense weapons and personnel to operate them to the UAE.

 
The deep corrupt Abu Dhabi and its sheik have been operating as a proxy for the Jewish State inside the GCC states for many years.

Posted by: Oui | May 13 2026 20:47 utc | 64

I’m on the ocean in Yachats 
 
Posted by: karlof1 | May 13 2026 20:35 utc | 58
 

 
I used to live West of Canyonville in Douglas Co.  It rained every morning except in high Summer.  Later I moved up HWY 58 in the Cascades where it rained a little bit less.
 

Posted by: too scents | May 13 2026 20:48 utc | 65

People pay government to make what they use as money worth less.

People are strange.

Posted by: Ornot | May 13 2026 20:49 utc | 66

People pay government to make what they use as money worth less.
 
Posted by: Ornot | May 13 2026 20:49 utc | 66
 

 
Well that’s backwards.  Throwing money into a fire increases the value of what isn’t burnt.
 

Posted by: too scents | May 13 2026 20:58 utc | 67

During the Great Depression down south, when they ran out of Sears catalogs in the outhouse, they’d have a box of red and white corncobs. Red for the dirty work and white to check on the cleaning job./sarc 

Posted by: morongobill | May 13 2026 21:06 utc | 68

Posted by: karlof1 | May 13 2026 20:35 utc | 58
I spent last week there with my sister and her three boys. The middle kid and his family live up in Newport but the youngest is up the river with his family, and the oldest is right there in the neighborhood.
Beautiful country, my sister hasn’t convinced me to move there yet in spite of her constant efforts…
 

Posted by: Helen Weals | May 13 2026 21:08 utc | 69

@ 57 james

China as well, was considered the top fertiliser where I read once. Animal manure or vegetable compost is better I think, as it is good to place a “species barrier” for questions of contamination etc.

Regarding plastic wrappers, in Spain even in the eighties bins were not used much, any rubbish would just be thrown in the street, on the floor of bars etc. The reason for this is that until around then it did not matter, as plastic wrapping was not common. Even in the 70’s locals would make paper wrappers for a living, using a water wheel to mash woodpulp, sift it out and lay it to dry by hand, then fold and glue the paper into small paper bags for sale. This out in the countryside as household activity, to sell to towns.

Anyway, once plastic wrappers became common, it soon left the towns a mess. Having lived in northern europe, if you turned up and saw people just throwing trash on the floor as they go about their day, you would have thought the people were just ‘poorly educated’ …but the above is the reason why.

If I remember, EU even tried to pass laws forbiding oil and vinegar from bottles at tables, obliging plastic single use containers. I think they passed the laws but no one respects them.

Posted by: Ornot | May 13 2026 21:16 utc | 70

@67 too cents

Definitely backwards.

They pay government to create debt which gets given to them as money and which they have to pay to government as tax to make it of value.

They fund the military, which then competes in market with them for everyday goods, via workers or industry, which makes prices higher or their money worth less.

They pay to bomb countries so causing restriction of comodity supply, so making that more expensive and so their money worth less.

I could give tens of other examples.

…so definitely backwards.

Posted by: Ornot | May 13 2026 21:23 utc | 71

All this to buy time (and public compliance) for the Great Reset, currently scheduled for the end of this decade.
Posted by: Fool Me Twice | May 13 2026 19:07 utc | 41
 
The “Great Reset” isn’t going to be that great and only confined to the group that still clings onto the U$. I’m certain the GFC 2007 -2009 has more to do with BRICS (June 16, 2009) than the Petrodollar. 
 
Russia, China and those that continue to trade with these countries will continue to succeed. We’re looking at the Cold War 2.0 situation with 1 camp doing rather well, while the other clings onto failed ideology. 
 
Except, the minions are starting to rebel as well. Austria has intercepted and turned back 2 unauthorised US military flights. Countries are getting in touch with Iran and paying toll fees. Chinese companies are saying a big Fuck You to U$ sanctions, etc.
 
Trump has accelerated the decline of the US hegemony pass the point of no return. Question now should be will the Neo Nero burn down the whole world?
________________________________________________________________________
 
Warning! O/T and a bit of toilet humour. Proceed at own risk.
 
 
I hear Urea is also in demand as a stabilizer for explosives. Money to be made going around and collection shit and urine by the comments so far.
 
Who knew your shit (night soil) could be this good.
 
You heard it here first. Time to bring back the Gong Farmers. 

Posted by: Suresh | May 13 2026 21:25 utc | 72

@ Ornot | May 13 2026 21:16 utc | 70
 
reminds me of all the plastic trash i saw in india in the late 90’s… tons of it, but the individuals look after their appearance very carefully… immediately outside there own small circle can be tons of garbage and no one seems to care… i wonder if it has changed… here in bc they put a law in place for no more plastic bags at the stores.. paper or your own hand bag only and you pay for the paper… i think i have this right…  plastic is like a scourge on the planet as i see it…

Posted by: james | May 13 2026 21:25 utc | 73

Posted by: james | May 13 2026 20:43 utc | 62
 
Sadly not james – horse manure can quite often be contaminated with aminopoyralid (used to control broadleaf weeds on pasture)  which will kill off your delicate seedlings even after it has passed through a horse (harmlessly, they say):
 
Aminopyralid – the herbicide that hasn’t gone away
 
Also  cousin chlorpyramid is found in lawn weed-and-feed, commonly found in local authority composts made from green waste.
 
Other than herbicides, it should be borne in mind that soil is generally a good cleaner of organic contaminants and most will not pass into the plant.

Posted by: ChatNPC | May 13 2026 21:27 utc | 74

Meanwhile, back at the ranch:
 

Western media note that, against the backdrop of Trump’s visit to China, 10 Russian ships are apparently also heading towards China with a cargo of energy resources.
 
The fleet crosses the Tsushima Strait and enters the East China Sea, heading towards the Yellow Sea. It consists of two military corvettes, a supply ship, a tugboat, and six cargo ships. All six cargo ships are subject to sanctions from the United States, the United Kingdom, and the EU.
 
As Western experts note, this is a real slap in the face to the collective West by Russia and China, demonstrating the unsustainable of the Western policy of pressure on Russia and China.
 
https://t.me/nicolaililin/11774

Posted by: LightYearsFromHome | May 13 2026 21:31 utc | 75

Posted by: james | May 13 2026 21:25 utc | 73

Are not the foods wrapped in plastic ? Cleansing products in non-recycled plastic bottles ?

Posted by: Fíréan | May 13 2026 21:33 utc | 76

Trump’s rant is telling.
Trump accuses media of ‘treason’ over Iran war coverage | The Independent
 
So too are reports of Iran’s 90% retention of offensive capabilities.
U.S. Intelligence Shows Iran Retains Substantial Missile Capabilities – The New York Times
 
So, 3LAs staging a quiet “revolt” on behalf of paymasters?
 
China’s front page coverage sidelines US – China meeting.
Telegram: View @Middle_East_Spectator

Posted by: Suresh | May 13 2026 21:45 utc | 77

Posted by: james | May 13 2026 20:32 utc | 56
 
I think you’ll find that all the supposed projects (going back to Posted by: Kaos Butters | May 13 2026 16:53 utc | 2) for a trans-Arabian pipeline, or otherwise railway, from Haifa to the Gulf, are all essentially an Israeli fantasy. In spite of escapekey’s lengthy detailed discussion of standards, there’s been no actual evidence of action except a video of a single convoy of trucks supposed to have come from the Gulf, filmed about to cross the Jordanian/Israeli border. We don’t even know for certain that it came from the Gulf. 
 
The reason for doubt is that Saudi is not sufficiently on board for such a scheme, having never signed the Abraham Accords. UAE would go for it, but it’s a long way across Saudi Arabia. There has been much evidence recently of Saudi hanging back, e.g. refusal to allow the US to use Saudi airfields. There’s a lot of popular resistance to closer relations with Israel, expressed no doubt through princes of the royal family.

Posted by: Laguerre | May 13 2026 21:53 utc | 78

@ ChatNPC | May 13 2026 21:27 utc | 74
 
interesting… i try to use only 3 year old horse manure which is supposed to be the best of the manures… i will have to ask about this at the place i get the free manure.. thanks..
 
@ Fíréan | May 13 2026 21:33 utc | 76
 
i avoid what i can… and i try to avoid the food packaging in plastic as much as possible.. it is possible.. maybe not 100%, but it is possible..
 
@ Laguerre | May 13 2026 21:53 utc | 79
 
thanks! i was thinking the same with regard to ksa as well… not sure how onboard they are with that project and i do add a good bit of salt to those escapekey articles… i always appreciate your viewpoints on the topic of the middle east.. cheers..
 
 

Posted by: james | May 13 2026 22:04 utc | 79

@29 karlof

Euro had small coinage converted to copper wrapped iron. Found tons of eurocents on the beaches, just about all of them rusting through and peeling off the copper layer.

During GFC in Spain, theft of copper wiring became a problem. Usually at building sites, but sometimes urbanisations would go dark (probably by mistake) as copper wiring was pulled from ducting.

Posted by: Ornot | May 13 2026 22:14 utc | 80

The deep corrupt Abu Dhabi and its sheik have been operating as a proxy for the Jewish State inside the GCC states for many years.
 
Posted by: Oui | May 13 2026 20:47 utc | 64
 
Certainly true, but they’re on their own in that. Noone else is going that far. It’s very likely that UAE is going to destroy their own economy during this war. It’s so easy to wreck their economy, and even more, international confidence in it for the future, that I doubt that they will ever get back to where they had been before the war.
 
Fun fact about Abu Dhabi: I, a mere male, did once have the weird experience of giving a lecture the Harem of the Sheikh (yes, he has one), about 15 years ago. I was led in to a large chamber with an impressive female audience, and then led out without being allowed to converse with the audience after the lecture. Very strange.

Posted by: Laguerre | May 13 2026 22:16 utc | 81

And?
 
The Trump regime explicitly and repeatedly stated that its loyalty is to “israel”, not to Americans.
 
After all, what are Americans going to do? Vote for the Democrats?
 
Who are the Democrats owned by?
 
Oh, right, the same AIPAC oligarchs who own the Republicans.
 
So how does any of this matter?
 

Posted by: Biswapriya Purkayastha | May 13 2026 22:28 utc | 82

@73 james

In europe now it is similar. The trouble is that almost all the plastic comes from wrapping and bottles anyway. The shop bought bags can be plastic, but I think biodegradable…they are useful as bin bags :-/ .

In Spain also, a lot of attention to own appearance, clothing is ‘high priority’ etc. , the difference is that now they have their act together a bit better. Before, the town tip was often open and on the edge of town, which was ok as a sort of compost heap, but not with plastics and other non degradable trash.

It isn’t o/t I think, b’s post focuses on related economy, fertilisers and plastic use are affected resources. Put another way, mitigating costs means diverting away from oil based products where possible, for fertilisers if there is shortage at national or regional level, it would be simply obliged due to non availability or non affordability. There are people who will not eat, who will lose their businesses and so on because of these events.

Posted by: Ornot | May 13 2026 22:31 utc | 83

Helen Weals | May 13 2026 21:08 utc | 69
 
Yes, this is an excellent region to live in. What I like to tout is our communal structure when it comes to public ownership of utilities and that ethos is also present in community relations, although we do have our problems. 

Posted by: karlof1 | May 13 2026 22:33 utc | 84

Ornot | May 13 2026 22:14 utc | 81
 
We had a similar plague here too and fuel theft as well. 

Posted by: karlof1 | May 13 2026 22:36 utc | 85

All government-produced data is bogus IMO, none more so than CPI data. If the BLS says it is 3.6 percent, it might be 13.6 percent. 

Posted by: GMST | May 13 2026 22:37 utc | 86

I could go on, but I thought I’d address the fertilizer issue. I live next to a sewage treatment plant and a couple of weeks ago there were tanker trucks lined up all day, hauling sewage out, I assume to spread on fields.
Anyway, life wasn’t actually that difficult. I think it’s doable, even if an entire generation has grown up not saving or conserving. They can learn. Google it.
Posted by: wagelaborer | May 13 2026 19:16 utc | 45

 
Even without resorting to using sewage as fertilizer, America doesn’t have to worry about importing fertilizers. Natural gas is the main ingredient in fertilizer production, and America has plenty of natural gas.
 
The Ukraine war is the favorite topic of Americans on MoA—have Americans collectively forgotten how the American war against Russia caused a disruption in gas supplies (Nord Stream) and Americans rode in to rescue the Europeans (at a high price) by exporting American LNG?
 
America might have a price problem, but it definitely doesn’t have a physical supply constraint problem. At worst, America can outbid everyone else for excess fertilizer or gas supplies in the open market.
 
While the absolute quantity of fertilizer imported by America is massive, it’s not a big share (18% nitrogen, 13% phosphate). The one big dependency is potassium at 97%, but Canada the American vassal tops the list of potassium import sources at 85%, so import dependence is not a real concern here either.
 
The laissez-faire “don’t worry about it” attitude works in America because it has the material foundations to weather the consequences of an American-created problem, but that attitude doesn’t work for the rest of the world who are far more vulnerable.
 
Interestingly, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization Corporate Statistical (FAOSTAT) Database of the United Nations, Canada itself, Brazil and Mexico are some of the most import-dependent countries when it comes to fertilizers. Both Canada and Brazil import more than 60% of their fertilizer, while it’s more than 70% for Mexico.
 
Handwaving the problem away by appealing to primitivism (“let’s return to ‘natural’ ways of doing things”) is complete horse manure. Current global population levels are sustained by fertilizer usage. A sudden cutoff in fertilizer supplies is like trying to quit drugs cold turkey with similarly disastrous results. In fact, I don’t even need to use analogies. There’s been real-world observational data: Sri Lanka’s organic farming experiment.
 
Sri Lanka originally planned for a ten-year period transition to wean itself off imported chemical fertilizer. Then, it suddenly announced a nationwide ban overnight. This immediately led to sharp drops in agricultural production and its attendant food security and economic crises.
 
Contrast this with China, which also recognized that fertilizer overuse is a problem. China has been gradually introducing measures to reduce fertilizer use instead of forcing changes overnight. Fertilizer use (synthetic and organic) in China already peaked around 2014-2015. There were programs at least as far back as 2012 to make fertilizer from sources such as food waste.
 
America’s actions in the Middle East have forcefully made it so that everyone can’t pick the gradual transition route. They will get an even worse version of the Sri Lanka experience. Unlike Sri Lanka which managed to dig itself out of its hole by reversing its chemical fertilizer import and usage bans, there are no policies that other countries can cancel to get themselves out of the problem of insufficient fertilizer supply. That’s because it’s not a policy problem but a physical supply constraint problem.
 
I don’t care about fertilizer shortage in America because there isn’t one, and if there ever was one (unlikely), then it was solely due to the actions of Americans.
 
Death to America
Marg bar Âmrikâ
Marg bar Âmrikâ
Marg bar Âmrikâ

Posted by: All Under Heaven | May 13 2026 22:40 utc | 87

“Iran LOCKED & LOADED on US Navy, Trump UTTERLY HUMILIATED by China Ben Norton”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xrnbBI7x67g
 
“China Tightens Rare Earths”
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=753q7_U9FgM

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | May 13 2026 22:48 utc | 88

China has the solution to all the woes of the US – But at what cost?

Posted by: General Factotum | May 13 2026 22:50 utc | 89

Posted by: Exile | May 13 2026 18:59 utc | 40
 
Posted by: Fíréan | May 13 2026 21:33 utc | 76
 

Cleansing products in non-recycled plastic bottles ?

 
Not exactly. Most plastics can be recycled, but not necessarily for reuse in their original form.
 
The simplest and most accessible conversion is into liquid fuel through pyrolysis.
 
With a little distillation and filtration, you can obtain decent gasoline and diesel, and even heavy fuel oil for heating.
There are some plastics to avoid due to the risks with hydrochloric and nitric acid in the combustion gases.
 
For survivalists, this is an important topic to explore because plastic will be available for a long time, and pyrolysis and distillation are accessible as DIY projects. This also applies to used tires.

Posted by: Sebgo | May 13 2026 23:01 utc | 90

Posted by: Sebgo | May 13 2026 23:01 utc | 96
 
And of course, China is number one in plastic and waste tires pyrolisis oil production to dispose of the waste.

Posted by: Sebgo | May 13 2026 23:06 utc | 91

Posted by: karlof1 | May 13 2026 22:33 utc | 85
I really look forward to my twice annual visits that way, drive in the Spring and by Amtrak in the Fall.
 
All the family there are not going anywhere else.

Posted by: Helen Weals | May 13 2026 23:06 utc | 92

Posted by: All Under Heaven | May 13 2026 22:40 utc | 88
“famine is our business” Damien: Omen 2.
———————
per the YT channel Stached Training, 80% of the composition of EVs is plastic. so when China’s batteries spontaneously combust, you can also see the petrol industry go up in flames. ditto vapes, e-bikes, battery storage facilities, phones, speakers, computers.
 
maybe Trump could insist China make batteries that work before they flood the planet w/them? he doesn’t want American kids to get burned vaping all that sweet flavored tobacco, does he?
 
 

Posted by: duck n cover | May 13 2026 23:07 utc | 93

Posted by: KillerDoll | May 13 2026 23:01 utc | 95
 
Boycott Bezos as far as I am concerned, this rent seeker wants to make a buck off every sale on earth. It’s like the Bezos tariff.

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | May 13 2026 23:12 utc | 94

The modern world is built upon petrochemical products like plastics. I can’t wait until 2 decades from now there will be peer reviewed study about microplastic impact upon human health released and Plastics will be treated as if they’re hazardous material like Lead or Asbestos.
 
If this war could make a slight change upon the world it should be plastic reduction because the world needs less Non- decomposable plastics.

Posted by: KillerDoll | May 13 2026 23:15 utc | 95

There is a slight sign of a slowing in CO2 emissions but it’s still too early to say what the trend will deliver in the longer term.
 
https://gml.noaa.gov/ccgg/trends/mlo.html

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | May 13 2026 23:20 utc | 96

Posted by: KillerDoll | May 13 2026 23:15 utc | 101
 
These studies already exist, and the results are just as worrying as you think.
 
There are direct correlations with fertility, among other things.

Posted by: Sebgo | May 13 2026 23:21 utc | 97

It’s clear according to this example that the Thatcher housewife analogy puts the government in a better financial position than the average Joe.  
Posted by: lachaussette | May 13 2026 16:40 utc | 1

 
***************
 
So, does Brian and his wife, or even the Average Joe, buy a new house every year?
 
… and here’s me, thinking that my lovely wife was a little extravagant…

Posted by: General Factotum | May 13 2026 23:23 utc | 98

Posted by: KillerDoll | May 13 2026 23:15 utc | 101
 
Part of the problem is that plastics are used because they are simply non-biodegradable. Many years ago I was involved in selling house and industrial paints that were made from more natural materials sourced from plant oils, resins, and wax. Many companies in Germany made these. They were non-toxic and actually smelt really pleasant. Non-allergy, the whole lot. Not harmful to sewage waste either with washing brushes/rollers etc.. They were more more expensive, in some cases twice the cost without much profit margin.
 
The problem was people complained that they didn’t last or were too sensitive to wear. So using paint differently and changing how people build with sensible design has to accompany any change for such products. People wanted natural, but literally also wanted non-biodegradable like plastic based acrylic paints at the same time. A contradiction. So cultural change is needed too since people tend to want their cake and eat it, so to speak.

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | May 13 2026 23:36 utc | 99

So, does Brian and his wife, or even the Average Joe, buy a new house every year? … and here’s me, thinking that my lovely wife was a little extravagant…
Posted by: General Factotum | May 13 2026 23:23 utc | 104
Better yet, a mortgage on the house is Debt against a real fixed asset. What precisely are you getting for long term, never repayable debt, from Government Expenditures.
____________________________________
Karlof. For years my wife and I took the 10 hour trip from the northern border to end up at Newport. Beautiful, relaxing, and the people were wonderful.
 
 

Posted by: kupkee | May 13 2026 23:47 utc | 100