Monday, 6 April 2026

QUESTIONING THE SANITY OF THE AMERICAN LEADERSHIP

6 April 2026

OVERVIEW

A stark question sits at the heart of geopolitics: what happens when personality, power, and belief collide at the very top of the global system? 

This piece traces a chain from leadership character, through inner circles and elite influence, into the realm of ideology and end-times thinking, asking whether we are witnessing action in pursuit of clearly defined and rational goals, in the frame of a carefully planned and calculated strategy, or rather is this a leadership suffering from collective delusion, creating the possibility of a far more dangerous outcome to the present madness.


1. Questioning The Sanity Of The American Leadership 

There is a deeper question that sits behind current events: the psychological character of the leadership at the very top of the present system.

It is not simply a matter of unpredictability, though that in itself signals instability. What we appear to be dealing with is a personality type marked by a constant need for admiration, a weak capacity for empathy, and a strong sense of entitlement. These traits can be grouped under the heading psychologists call narcissism - a pattern of behaviour centred on self-importance and validation-seeking.

Alongside this can in some circumstances and particularly in times of stress, come suspicion, paranoia, grievance, and at times a harsh, punitive or even sadistic attitude towards others. 

Furthermore this is someone who openly states that he has cast aside international norms in favour of how he feels and his own sense of morality. This is extraordinary stuff and we wonder where the Constitution and its checks and balances have gone. 

When such a character sits at the apex of global power, with access to immense military capability, including the red button, the stakes are obvious.

  • Narcissism – a personality pattern characterised by grandiosity, need for admiration, and low empathy

2. The Inner Circle – Competence Or Conformity

Leadership does not operate in isolation. It is of course shaped, reinforced, or moderated by those closest to it.

The concern here is not simply loyalty. All leaders attract loyal followers, by the definition of leadership. 

The question is whether that loyalty crowds out competence and independent judgement. When a team becomes overly aligned to one personality, it risks becoming sycophantic – echoing rather than challenging. 

More than this, who is in Trump's cabinet and who are his advisors? Trump eschews trained, professional and expert advice from his administration, officers of the state selected on qualifications, experience and intelligence  - he does not trust what he calls the Deep state and instead chooses a cabinet of advisors from his family members and friends become sycophants or are discarded. 

So there are questions of experience and emotional steadiness here. High-pressure geopolitical environments require depth, discipline, reflection and restraint. Without these, decision-making can pass over structured analysis and planning and turn instead towards instinct, emotion and reaction.

  • Sycophancy – excessive flattery or agreement with authority, often at the expense of truth

3. Power Structures – The Influence Of Elite Networks

Beyond formal government sits another layer: informal networks and influential lobbies.

Figures such as Jeffrey Epstein have become shorthand for a wider class of elites operating across finance, politics, military, industry and media. This "power elite" does not have to be a single coordinated group, but a loosely connected network of influence that aligns on shared self-interest. So we have what is referred to as the Epstein class feeding into and shaping narratives and priorities.

When such networks are aligned with conflict or escalation, it raises questions about underlying motivations and shared worldviews. Whether justified or not, the perception itself contributes to a growing distrust of elite structures.

  • Elite networks – informal groups of powerful individuals influencing decisions beyond formal institutions

4. Zionism And The Armageddon Narrative

At the ideological level, attention turns to belief systems, particularly the current iteration of religious Zionism.

Zionism itself is a broad and complex movement. However, in these religious interpretations, it becomes intertwined with end-times thinking. This includes the concept of Armageddon, drawn from Book of Revelation.

Armageddon, derived from Har Megiddo (Mount Megiddo, a place in Israel), is an ancient battlefield where the final confrontation between good and evil will be fought. In these interpretations, conflict is not just political, but part of a divine sequence leading to transformation.

The culmination is the emergence of a “new heaven and new earth” - a complete reordering of reality with the establishment of the Kingdom of God on Earth.

  • Eschatology – the study of end-times and final events in religious belief

5. From Theology To Geopolitics

The trouble arises when such end-times narratives seep into real-world power thinking, which - however how this is to believe - is happening. 

When leaders or influential groups are guided, even partially, by apocalyptic thinking and frameworks, then conflict can take on an altogether different meaning. It is no longer something to be avoided or managed, but something that fulfils an inevitable divine destiny.

From a strategic perspective, such narratives can be used, consciously or unconsciously, to justify and sustain global dominance, an ideological scaffolding for hegemony. Narrative is after all what holds together a social and political order. 

This is where the overlap between belief, power, and policy is at its most worrisome.

  • Hegemony – dominance of one state or group over others, can lead to Empire 

6. Madness Or Misinterpretation

At this point, two interpretations emerge:

  • One sees a pattern of irrationality, even madness
  • The other sees a mix of belief, strategy, and power politics

Both elements can be present at the same time, such are we humans and our systems.

But the language, tone, and apparent motivations of this leadership are deeply concerning. Not just elites outside Washington, but increasingly ordinary people outside the systems of governance, are struggling to make sense of events.


7. The Final Check and Balance – Ordinary People

If there is a stabilising force, history suggest s it may not lie within the existing Order of rules, institutions and elite networks.

In periods of excess, overreach, or ideological distortion, the people lose faith and awake and elite behaviour and actions provoke a response from civil society. People who are not invested in power structures, who have little to gain from conflict, often see things more plainly.

So the hope is that this broader base acts as a corrective. Not through grand ideology, but through something far less complex: a return to grounded judgement, a kingdom not of God or prophecy or empire, but of common sense.

  • Common sense – practical, shared reasoning grounded in everyday reality

References

  • American Psychiatric Association – personality frameworks
  • Book of Revelation
  • Armstrong, K. – history of religious movements and interpretations
  • Nye, J. – power and influence in global politics
  • Dalio, R. – cycles of power and internal order

Sunday, 5 April 2026

ISRAEL - WHEN NARRATIVE HARDENS AND A PEOPLE DETACHES FROM REALITY

5 April 2026

ISRAEL - WHEN NARRATIVE HARDENS AND DETACHES FROM REALITY

This is not a piece about the Jews, and it is not anti-Semitic, not at all, it is a piece about Zionist values, the narrative Zionists tell themselves, how that narrative has evolved into something quite catastrophic for Jewish people and potentially the world, and how Jewish people might save Israel by breaking the spell on this narrative. 


1. Summary

This piece examines how a narrative evolves over time and how, under pressure, it can harden, transform, and ultimately detach from the realities it was designed to manage. The Israeli case is not simply political or military, it is a study in how values shift across generations, and how a system built on defensible human foundations can, through successive narrative layers, arrive at outcomes that contradict those very foundations.

The reader can skip the framework architecture section, next, and read through the narrative and maybe return to the framework at the end. 


2. The Zionist Values Architecture

The evolution of Zionist values - a framework. 

2.1 Founding values - Herzl's secular aspirational project

  • Survival as the supreme value, overriding all others
  • Collective security through sovereignty - safety requires a state
  • Self-determination as the natural right of a people
  • Pragmatism - territory, organisation, and political will as the instruments of salvation

2.2 Post-Holocaust values - the sacred layer

  • "Never Again" as absolute moral imperative, licensing whatever is necessary
  • Victimhood as moral authority - suffering confers legitimacy
  • Memory as obligation - to forget or forgive is to betray the dead
  • Existential vigilance - threat is permanent and must be met with permanent readiness

2.3 Post-1967 values - the religious nationalist capture of Zionism

  • Divine covenant supersedes international law or human rights frameworks
  • Land as sacred - territorial compromise is theological betrayal
  • Chosenness as destiny - the Jewish people have a unique and divinely ordained role
  • Strength as virtue - power is not merely necessary but righteous

2.4 Post-October 7th values - the terminal stage

  • Collective punishment as justice - the distinction between combatant and civilian dissolves
  • Genocide as self-defence - proportionality becomes irrelevant when existence is framed as being at stake
  • Dehumanisation as permission - the enemy is redefined outside the category of the human

What is visible in this architecture is a values system that began with entirely defensible humanist premises - survival, self-determination, safety - and through successive narrative transformations arrived at values that literally invert humanism entirely. That inversion is the story being written and rewritten.

Value - a belief about what matters enough to justify action

Values architecture – the layered system of beliefs that emerges from experience and evolves over time and shapes the mission and decision-making within a political or social system


3. The Founding: Survival And Self-Determination

In the Russian Empire, Jewish communities were confined by law to the Pale of Settlement and subjected to waves of state-tolerated pogroms - organised mob violence intensifying sharply through the 1880s, instrumentalised by the Tsarist regime as a convenient deflection of popular anger onto a vulnerable minority. Across Eastern Europe, persecution was systematic so that assimilation came to be seen as an illusion and Aliyah ("ascent" or return to Homeland) became the dominating emotional expression of this experience. 

Theodor Herzl, a Viennese journalist who had watched a Parisian crowd bay for the blood of a Jewish officer on fabricated charges during the Dreyfus Affair, drew the decisive conclusion: Jewish safety could never rest on the tolerance of host societies but required sovereign territory. In 1896 he published Der Judenstaat - The Jewish State - launching Zionism as a modern political movement in the 19th century European nationalist mould.

The founding values were secular and humanist: survival as the supreme imperative, collective security through sovereignty, self-determination as the natural right of a people, and pragmatism as the instrument of salvation. These were not exceptional values - they were the common currency of European nationalism applied to a stateless people with an urgent and legitimate problem. The founding mission was unambiguous: to secure a homeland and end the permanent vulnerability of Jewish life.

It is very interesting to note that the emotional and practical movement preceded Herzl's political theory - Herzl gave narrative and organisational form to something already stirring from the experience of the people.

Aliyah the act of a Jewish person "rising" or "ascending" to the homeland. The word itself encodes the belief that return to the land of Israel is not not just migration, but is a spiritual elevation.

Self-determination – the principle that a people have the right to determine their own political status and governance


4. Balfour 1917: Legitimacy And Geography

The Balfour Declaration of 1917, in which Great Britain formally endorsed the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Palestine, was the next step, the structural consolidation following the launch of Zionism as a modern political movement

Recognition by a great power conferred legitimacy on the project. Palestine was now confirmed as the specific territory, and political possibility now hardened into a recognised programme. A new value entered the architecture - international endorsement as moral validation, the external world confirming the justice of the claim. 

This would prove double-edged as a narrative that requires external validation is vulnerable when that validation is withdrawn.

Legitimacy – the perception that authority or a claim is justified and accepted by others


5. The Holocaust: Victimhood As Absolute Authority

The Holocaust transformed the values architecture at its very foundations. What had been a political argument became a moral absolute. "Never Again" emerged as the supreme value - an imperative so total that it licensed whatever would become necessary for its fulfilment (ends over means). 

Victimhood, rooted in genuine and catastrophic suffering, became the primary source of moral authority. 

Memory - kept in books museums galleries... - became sacred obligation - to question the state was to dishonour the dead. 

Existential and eternal vigilance replaced pragmatic calculation as the governing disposition: threat was permanent, enemies were always present, readiness could never be relaxed. This is a kind of absolutism where it's easy to imagine violence replacing dialogue.

These values were entirely understandable given what had occurred. But they carried within them a dangerous seed: a framework in which existential fear as the organising principle tends toward the permanent identification of existential enemies, and a narrative built on victimhood will struggle to accommodate the moment it becomes the author of another people's similar suffering.

Existential threat – a perceived danger to the survival of a people or state


6. 1967: Divine Covenant Replaces Human Right, The Moment Zionism Became Religious Zionism 

The 1967 war was the turning point at which the values architecture underwent its most consequential transformation. Victory on that scale, against multiple adversaries, capturing the biblical territories of Judea and Samaria, carried an almost theological charge. It  confirmed the promise, the divine favour was real. It opened the intoxicating vision of a Greater Israel - the full biblical territory, the Promised Land - as political reality rather than religious dream. 

The secular founding values were progressively displaced by a fanciful religious sense of entitlement in a nationalist framework. This is an important transformation of values. Figures such as Zvi Yehuda Kook provided the theological architecture: territorial expansion was divine obligation, settlement was sacred duty, and the land itself was a sacred covenant that no human authority could abrogate.

This values shift was profound and irreversible. Self-determination - a universal human value applicable in principle to any people - was replaced by chosenness, a value that is by definition exclusive and hierarchical. International law and human rights frameworks, which operate on the premise of universal human dignity, became irrelevant or actively hostile, since they applied the same standards to all parties and values that are inferior being man-given. 

Land ceased to be a territory, an asset, and became testimony, divine recompense for a faithful people, proof that Yahweh's promise to his people had outlasted every empire that had tried to extinguish them. 

And strength, previously understood as a necessary instrument of survival, was recast as a Nietzschian virtue, the expression of a people's vitality and right to existence, now fully able to defend what they believed had been divinely promised them.

Respect for others is also a value, but one that suffered in this self confidence. 

Chosenness – the belief that a particular group has a unique, exclusive, divinely sanctioned role or status


7. October 7th 2023: The Terminal Inversion

October 7th was the final multiplier - the moment at which the accumulated values architecture reached its logical and catastrophic conclusion. 

The Hamas attacks provided the trigger that dissolved whatever moral restraint had survived the preceding decades. The narrative, already hardened beyond internal reform, now seemed to separate entirely from physical restraint, reason and reality.

The terminal values emerged with terrible clarity. Collective punishment displaced individual accountability - the distinction between combatant and civilian, the foundational principle of the laws of war, was explicitly rejected by senior officials. 

Proportionality, the value that calibrates response to threat, was declared inapplicable when existence itself was framed as at stake. 

This looks like trauma, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), one could be forgiven for thinking that some kind of big society group therapy or vaccine is needed, except that this highly emotional disposition seems to have percolated through the Epstein class, to judge by the latest warmongering against Iran. Obviously this is the opinion of the author of this piece, but surely anyone outside this group would recognise that the response of Israel is a completely over the top, boundless and bare, resort to barbaric violence over what is after all just a land rights issue. 

Dehumanisation, previously implicit, became explicit and official - the language of animals, of Amalek, of human darkness, of the hangman's noose (the current lapel pin worn by some members of the Israeli cabinet), performing the necessary narrative work of placing the target population outside the category of those whose suffering counts. Annihilation, genocide,  reframed as self-defence, and self-defence does not require a moral ceiling.

What is visible in this values trajectory is not the story of a people who were always capable of this, but of a narrative that began with entirely defensible humanist premises and through successive transformations - each driven by genuine fear, genuine trauma, genuine threat - arrived at the systematic inversion of the values it set out with. 

Survival, a universal value, became the justification for denying survival to others. Self-determination became the denial of self-determination. Never Again became the operational framework for what the rest of the world labels genocide. Theology became the reason for routine ethnic cleansing and is referred to casually as "mowing the lawn". 

Proportionality – the principle that response to force should be limited and commensurate with the threat faced

Amalek - the people in the Bible whom God commanded the Israelites to utterly destroy without exception - man, woman, child, and livestock - making it the closest thing in scripture to a divine mandate for total extermination of an enemy or what do we call today genocide.


8. The Catastrophe Of Narrative Capture

Unlike Rome, where narrative failure produced reinvention, (as we shall see in a subsequent post), a Make Rome Great Again story replacing an exhausted one, this Israeli case has produced something more dangerous that many find disagreeable, barbarian, disgusting even. In its latest incarnation, the Zionist narrative and its values has become so fused with identity, theology, and existential fear that it cannot be replaced without the entire political and institutional (ie state) structure it supports risking collapse in its entirety. 

The values are the load-bearing pillars of the Temple. To question collective punishment is to question Never Again. To question settlement is to question divine covenant. To question the genocide in Gaza and now the West Bank is to question the Holocaust. Every challenge to the present is routed through the sacred past, creating a belief system that is totally rigid and making reform narratively equivalent to betrayal and apostasy. 

The people this narrative was designed to protect have become, in the eyes of much of the world, the authors of the very crime that defined their own suffering. That is not a political failure alone, it is a narrative catastrophe - the point at which the story a people tells about itself has so completely captured their perception of reality that the values which once made the story defensible have been inverted beyond recognition, and no common ground for meaning with the outside world - with reality - remains.

Rome survived its narrative failure through transformation. Whether Israel's narrative can transform before it destroys both what it was built to protect and what it has actually built and achieved, remains the most urgent and most painful question with the greatest ramifications for contemporary political life.

Narrative capture – a condition in which a belief system becomes so dominant that it overrides external reality and blocks adaptation

Apostasy - the abandonment or betrayal of a sacred belief or commitment. In religious contexts, an act so grave it places the transgressor outside the community of the faithful.


Saturday, 4 April 2026

THE HORMUZ TOLL BOOTH WHY IT CANNOT EXIST AND YET IT DOES

3 April 2026

SUMMARY

Iran cannot legally charge tolls in the Strait of Hormuz under UNCLOS, yet geography and power create something real: a system of selective closure where access is priced through risk, insurance, and control. In a world of war damage and rising reconstruction costs, the idea of Hormuz as a de facto toll booth moves from theory to operations.

This post explains the legal paradox, proposes an economic mechanism for collecting tolls and assesses the strategic implications. 

1. The Idea – From Destruction To Revenue

Israel and the United States are going hell for leather destroying the basic built environment of Iran, but they are not paying attention to Iran’s demand for reparations. Rather than demanding compensation, Iran could monetise control over the flow of ships through the Strait of Hormuz. Rather than relying on legal claims that would take years to argue through courts and diplomacy, the logic shifts to something much more practical and immediate: control the flow, and the revenue follows. What cannot exist formally as a toll booth can function informally as a revenue machine.

So I have checked out this idea. First, some background. 


2. The System – Global Choke Points And Real Toll Booths

There are a number of maritime choke points globally where the movement of goods and energy is constrained. These bottlenecks can be natural straits, artificial canals, or even extended to pipelines.

In reality, the number of true toll booths is very small.

  • Suez Canal
  • Panama Canal

These are engineered corridors, not natural straits. They charge roughly a million dollars per large vessel, and each generates in the order of five to ten billion dollars US annually.

By contrast, the great natural choke points such as Hormuz, Bab el Mandeb or Malacca,  do not formally charge tolls. Under international law, they have to be kept open.

But that is only the legal surface.

Glossary

  • Choke Point – narrow passage critical to global trade flows
  • Transit Fee – payment for passage through controlled infrastructure

3. Estimates of the Costs of Reparations 

As to costs, you have to distinguish between damage, loss, and reconstruction.

  • Damage is what is physically destroyed
  • Loss is the GDP that disappears while systems are down
  • Reconstruction is the cost of updating and putting it all back together again 

The modern benchmark is Ukraine, where reconstruction and recovery estimates are now in the region of $500–700 billion depending on methodology and a full rebuild may take that to a 1 trillion required investment. Given that the Donbass is an industrial heartland similar to the Ruhr Delta, payback could come in as little as 3 to 5 years ( my guess work, d y o r). 

Iran is possibly smaller in economic terms, it depends on how far through the program to return Iran to the Stone Age taco Trump goes, but the sequencing is similar. If escalation continues, destruction could move through layers:

  • Bridges and transport arteries
  • Military-industrial facilities
  • Electricity generation and grid
  • Ports, refineries, and export capacity
  • Housing, hospitals, education

Once you start moving down that stack, costs accelerate non-linearly.

A reasonable working range today might sit somewhere between $600 billion and $1.5 trillion (some studies have been started already eg UNDP, but these are my figures), moving to the upper end if critical civilian infrastructure is systematically degraded.


4. Hormuz As A Toll Booth, Strategy

If the Strait of Hormuz carries roughly 20 percent of global oil flows, then even a modest “toll equivalent” could generate large sums.

  • Hypothetical revenue: $20–30 billion annually
  • Payback period: 10 to 20 years for major reconstruction

From a purely mechanical perspective, it makes a satisfactory financing instrument.

Furthermore, letting the geopolitical imagination kick in, 

  • Sanctions relief could be added or offset against “safe passage guarantees”
  • Regional actors could monetise restraint rather than escalation (for example, Israel could support the defense of Iran by ceasing to mow the lawn) 
  • Charge for ships to not only leave but to enter the Gulf 
  • Given that oil is trading at above 100 dollars a barrel, double the tax, from 1 to 2m USD, payable in RNB to avoid sanctions and weaken the eurodollar 
  • Switch to a variable duty, charged on hydrocarbon content 

Being realistic, this is how systems evolve under pressure, by lifting constraints.


5. The Execution Premium – How To Actually Charge?

Operationally, how could such a fee be levied? How to set up the toll booth. 

Execution converts the strategy into an operational toll booth with measurable performance. The trouble is, you cannot simply erect a toll gate in open water.

Instead, the system rests on:

  • Insurance premiums rise
  • Routes become “unsafe” for some
  • Escorts are required
  • Access becomes conditional, selective

So this is not a legal toll, it is an economic filter.

Glossary

  • Execution Premium – refers to the real-world difficulty of aligning reality to a strategic idea and rolling it out operationally 
  • War Risk Premium – additional insurance cost for operating in conflict zones

6. The Legal Constraint – And The Loophole

Thing is that - peace to UNCLOS, the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea governing maritime rights - the Strait of Hormuz is so narrow that, at its tightest point, every vessel passes through the territorial waters of both Iran and Oman.

Yet, the waterway is legally classified as an international strait, which activates the doctrine of transit passage.

This means:

  • Ships must be allowed continuous and uninterrupted passage
  • The right cannot be suspended, even in tension

So formally, there can be no toll booth. But informally, something else emerges.

Because while the law guarantees passage, geography places control in the hands of those sitting on the water.

Further work 

Türkiye has formal, treaty-based control over the Dardanelles and Bosphorus, under the Montreux Convention, allowing it to regulate naval access and even restrict passage in wartime. That control is codified in law. 

By contrast, the Strait of Hormuz operates under UNCLOS, where access is being controlled informally through risk and power. 

The interesting question is whether such informal leverage could, over time, be formalised into a treaty framework, in the manner of Montreux, turning de facto control into de jure authority.


7. The Reality is Selective Closure

What we have in practice is selective closure - open to some, closed to others, effected not by decree, but by risk. IE, insurance, threat perception, and naval posture do the work that the law of the sea forbids.

So the system evolves from legal openness to practical selectivity. And this, in effect, is the toll booth.


8. The Bottom Line – Power, Not Paper

The conclusion is uncomfortable to Western maritime interests but clear.

  • The law says Hormuz must remain open
  • The map says access can be controlled
  • The market makers, on behalf of Iran and Oman, will decide who actually passes

So reparations in this framework are not demanded or negotiated, they are extracted over time through a tax on flows. And notice that Iran is very careful to emphasize that the straight is not closed, which is true... It is just that it is only open to its friends. 

Which brings us back back to the core point. Controversially, we are heading to a New Order, one where the United Nations must be reformed or replaced and where in this case, real toll booths are not built, they are imposed.

Thursday, 2 April 2026

WHAT IS DRIVING GOLD - UPDATE 2 APRIL

2 April 2026

1. GOLD PRICE

Sentiment Dominates, Structure Endures


Our Framework
To understand gold's behaviour, we use a three layer framework:
° Macro pressure
° Market structure
° Structural trend

Macro Indicators
To simplify, we use three signals to understand gold's behaviour :

  • DXY → strength above 100 pressures gold
  • 10-year yield → high levels above and say 4.3% inflation increase opportunity cost
  • Oil → drives the entire chain

  • DXY – an index measuring the strength of the US dollar against the basket of principal currencies

Overview 

Short-term gold price action is being driven by political rhetoric and market psychology, not by a breakdown in the long-term monetary case. The mechanism is in the short term reactive, fast, and sentiment-led.


2. The Immediate Driver – Political Signalling

  • Recent statements from Donald Trump have shifted market tone sharply. He is publicly threatening to "bring them back to the Stone Age where they belong" before he leaves and he says he doesn't care anymore about the croc of uranium 

  • Escalatory rhetoric towards Iran has:

    • Pushed oil prices higher
    • Increased perceived geopolitical risk
    • Triggered a defensive market response
  • Markets are reacting not to events, but to anticipated escalation


  • Market sentiment – collective mood or expectations of investors, often driving short-term price moves

3. The Transmission Mechanism – Oil To Yields

The process is mechanical and rapid:

  • Higher oil price
    → Raises inflation expectations

  • Higher inflation expectations
    → Pushes up US bond yields

  • Rising yields
    → Increase attractiveness of income-generating assets

  • Result:
    → Gold becomes relatively less attractive


  • Inflation expectations – market belief about future price increases
  • Bond yield – return earned on government debt, often used as a benchmark for global capital

4. The Dollar Effect – The Key Pressure Point

  • Rising yields support the US dollar (DXY)

  • A stronger dollar:

    • Acts as a global “safe haven”
    • Tightens global liquidity
    • Places downward pressure on gold
  • This is the classic relationship:

    • Strong dollar → weaker gold (short term)

  • DXY (Dollar Index) – measure of the US dollar against major currencies

5. Central Bank Behaviour – Forced Selling Dynamics

  • Governments face rising external pressures:

    • Higher cost of imported energy
    • Currency weakness against the dollar
  • Response:

    • Sell gold reserves
    • Buy dollars
    • Stabilise domestic currency
  • Mechanism:

    • Treasury departments draw on reserves held at central banks
    • Gold is liquidated to meet dollar demand
  • In countries dependent on oil for their main revenue, such as the Gulf :

    • Revenue volatility increases pressure
    • Fiscal gaps may force additional reserve sales

  • Foreign exchange reserves – assets held by central banks to support currency stability

6. Political Constraint – The Hidden Driver

  • Governments are not acting purely economically

  • They are constrained by:

    • Social stability
    • Domestic political risk
  • Rising fuel costs → public pressure

  • Result:

    • Policy becomes reactive
    • Reserve management becomes defensive
  • The priority is:

    • Avoid unrest
    • Maintain currency credibility

7. The Core Insight – Two Systems At Work

There are two overlapping systems:

A. Short-Term System (Dominant Now)

  • Sentiment-driven
  • Politically reactive
  • Liquidity-sensitive

B. Long-Term System (Unchanged)

  • Debt expansion

  • Currency debasement

  • Structural demand for gold

  • The current weakness in gold is:

    • Tactical
    • Not structural

  • Debasement – reduction in the real value of a currency through inflation or money creation

8. The Causal Chain (Simplified)

  • Trump rhetoric
    → Oil price rises

  • Oil price rises
    → Inflation expectations increase

  • Inflation expectations increase
    → 10-year US Treasury yield rises

  • Yields rise
    → Dollar strengthens

  • Dollar strengthens
    → Gold comes under pressure


9. Final Observation – A Contrarian Perspective

  • Markets appear to be:

    • Pricing immediate risk
    • Ignoring long-term fragility
  • Yet:

    • The very forces pushing gold down
    • Are the same forces that justify holding it
  • Conclusion:

    • Sentiment is dominant in the short term
    • Fundamentals remain intact over the long term
    • Buy gold "on the dips"
    • Please do your own research 

10. References


Monday, 30 March 2026

GOLD ANALYSIS

27 March 2026

OVERVIEW

Gold is falling at the very moment it is supposed to rise. That is not a contradiction. It is the system working exactly as it should.

To understand gold's unexpected behavior, this post uses a three layer framework:
° Macro pressure
° Market structure
° Structural trend


1. The Core Insight – Gold Is Not Failing, The Mechanism Is Misunderstood

Gold’s recent decline looks wrong only if we focus on the event and ignore the process. In a period of geopolitical tension, the instinct is to expect a safe haven to strengthen. Yet markets do not respond directly to events; they respond to the chain of consequences those events set in motion.

What we are seeing is not a breakdown, but a temporary dislocation. Two forces are acting together. One is mechanical, driven by interest rates and currency movements. The other is situational, driven by forced selling during a crisis. Together they create the appearance of weakness, while in reality the market is passing through a reset within a longer-term trend.

  • Opportunity cost – the return you give up by holding one asset instead of another
  • Forced liquidation – selling that occurs out of necessity rather than choice

2. The Primary Mechanism – Why Gold Falls During A Crisis

Geopolitical tension → energy disruption → inflation pressure → higher yields → stronger dollar → weaker gold

To understand gold, one must follow the sequence rather than the headlines. A geopolitical shock disrupts energy supply and pushes oil prices higher. Markets react immediately, pricing in future inflation before it appears.

Central banks respond by holding policy tight. Yields rise, and the dollar strengthens as global capital seeks safety. These two forces are decisive. They raise the cost of holding gold, which produces no income, and draw capital towards assets that do.

The result is counterintuitive but consistent. The crisis that appears supportive for gold creates the very conditions that suppress it in the short term.

  • Geopolitical shock → oil price spike
  • Oil spike → inflation expectations rise
  • Inflation expectations → central bank restraint
  • Central bank restraint → higher yields and stronger dollar
  • Higher yields and stronger dollar → gold under pressure
  • Hawkish policy – prioritising inflation control through higher interest rates
  • Real yield – the return on bonds after accounting for inflation

3. The Amplification System – How A Correction Becomes A Cascade

The mechanism explains direction, but not speed. The sharpness of the move comes from amplification, where three forces reinforce each other and accelerate the decline.

The first lies in leveraged investment products. These instruments magnify price movements and must rebalance continuously. As prices fall, they are forced to sell, which drives prices lower still.

The second comes from sovereign behaviour. Energy-importing nations suddenly require more dollars as oil prices rise. Their currencies weaken, inflation risks intensify, and central banks are compelled to act. Gold becomes a source of liquidity, sold not by choice but by necessity.

The third is algorithmic trading. Large parts of the market now respond automatically to predefined signals. When yields and the dollar cross key thresholds, selling is triggered without interpretation.

  • Leveraged funds → forced selling as prices fall
  • Sovereigns → gold sales to meet dollar demand
  • Algorithms → automatic selling at key thresholds
  • Leverage – using borrowed funds to increase exposure
  • Algorithmic trading – automated execution based on preset conditions

4. The Hidden Force – Sovereign Margin Calls

Beneath the visible pressures lies a deeper dynamic. When oil prices rise sharply, energy-importing nations face an immediate strain. They need more dollars, their currencies weaken, and inflation begins to build.

At that point, choices narrow quickly. Allowing the currency to fall risks instability. Running down reserves has limits. Selling gold becomes the most immediate solution.

This is best understood as a sovereign margin call. Just as an investor is forced to liquidate assets to meet obligations, a nation may be compelled to do the same. The key point is that this reflects necessity, not a loss of confidence.

  • Oil shock → higher dollar demand
  • Currency weakness → inflation pressure
  • Policy response → gold sold for liquidity
  • FX defence – actions taken to support a weakening currency
  • Margin call – forced asset sale to meet obligations

5. The Critical Signal – Paper Versus Physical Gold

The difference between paper and physical gold is central to interpreting the current move. The paper market, made up of ETFs and futures, is driven by flows, leverage, and short-term positioning. It is where volatility appears.

The physical market operates on a different horizon. Central banks and long-term holders continue to accumulate gold as a strategic asset. Demand remains steady, indicating that confidence has not changed.

When these two markets diverge, it usually signals a transfer of ownership. Weak holders are forced out, while stronger hands step in. Historically, this has marked the middle of a cycle, not its end.

  • Paper market → volatile, flow-driven
  • Physical market → steady, accumulation-driven
  • Counterparty risk – the risk that a financial obligation is not honoured

6. The Reset Framework – A Repeating Pattern

The chain cycle works as follows.

START HERE Geopolitical escalation
Energy disruption
Higher energy prices
Inflation pressure
Central banks tighten
Bond yields rise
Dollar strengthens
Gold weakens in the short term

Then, over time:

Debt expands to support the system
Monetary credibility erodes
Confidence in fiat weakens
Currency debasement accelerates
Gold rises structurally

This is the reset. Gold moves through phases rather than in a straight line, reflecting the tension between short-term pressure and long-term structure. Forced liquidation gives way to stabilisation, and stabilisation to structural reaccumulation.

  • Phase 1 → forced liquidation
  • Phase 2 → stabilisation
  • Phase 3 → structural reaccumulation
  • De-dollarisation – reducing reliance on the US dollar in global finance

7. What To Watch – The Indicators That Matter

Despite the complexity of events, the short-term direction of gold can be read through a few key indicators. These provide clearer guidance than headlines.

The dollar index is central. A strong dollar places pressure on gold, while a weaker one supports it. Bond yields determine the opportunity cost of holding gold. Oil sits at the beginning of the chain, driving inflation expectations and dollar demand.

  • DXY → strength above 100 pressures gold
  • 10-year yield → high levels above and say 4.3% inflation increase opportunity cost
  • Oil → drives the entire chain
  • DXY – an index measuring the strength of the US dollar against the basket of principal currencies 

8. A Balanced View – Two Interpretations

The bearish view emphasises persistence. If yields remain high, the dollar stays strong, and sovereign selling continues, gold may remain under pressure.

The bullish view looks to structure. Debt levels are difficult to sustain at high rates, central banks continue to diversify, and the current selling is temporary. From this perspective, the reset is preparing the ground for the next phase.


9. Final Synthesis – Price Versus Value

The key distinction is between price and value. In the short term, gold is shaped by liquidity, interest rates, and currency movements. These forces can produce sharp and sometimes misleading signals.

In the longer term, gold reflects deeper realities: debt, monetary credibility, and geopolitical balance. Those drivers remain intact.

This is not a failure. It is a transition. The reset clears excess and prepares the ground for what follows. Historically, it is within these transitions that the most significant opportunities emerge.

  • Reset – a temporary adjustment that clears excess before a trend resumes

Friday, 20 March 2026

HOW DOES AMERICA CONTROL ITS VASSALS

20 March 2026

How to recruit, retain and control your vassals

The strategy for recruiting, holding, and controlling proxy states, or "vassals," involves several key almost Mafia-type mechanisms:

1. Political Capture: This is achieved through significant financial influence, such as lobbying money and campaign donations, as well as threats to the elected status or health of the candidate, and "soft power" generally, which ensures that political systems and leaders align with US interests. The US also influences government formation and captures intelligence services within these states.

2. Security Integration and Training: The US builds up and partially runs the internal security apparatus of these states, trains and arms specific military or paramilitary groups, provides ISR, to exert control and enforce desired policies and actions.

3. Information Control: Funding NGOs and controlling a significant portion of the media in these proxy states helps shape public opinion and maintain influence, preventing dissent or independent decision-making.

4. Strategic Exploitation: Proxies are used as expendable fronts to absorb conflict, blame, and retaliatory damage, allowing the US to advance its geopolitical objectives while maintaining plausible deniability. Their resources are also exploited to serve US interests.



AMERICA'S ENDURING GOAL AND GRAND STRATEGY FOR WAR

20 March 2026

AMERICA'S GRAND STRATEGY
Iran is a step on the road to weakening China in order that America can maintain its global dominance. Iran is part of America's war against a multipolar world. 

A crisis is unfolding. America escalates, Europe pays, Russia benefits, China waits its turn. Slowly slowly, America's long-term goal and strategies becomes visible to us.

Overview
A war that looks chaotic may in fact have an elaborate structure and careful detailled planning. The peoples of Europe are beginning to notice and wake up to their dilemma, but it may already be too late.



1. Stage Three And Rising Fear

Professor Robert Pape warns that we are entering stage 3 of 5 in escalation against Iran. Stage 3 is already scaring the bejesus out of most of us.

If stage 3 already feels extreme, then stages 4 and 5 move into territory that could engulf entire regions and possibly the globe. This is not a limited conflict. It is a ladder, and each rung increases risk exponentially.

What makes this alarming is not just the military dimension, but the systemic exposure. Energy markets, supply chains, and financial systems are all tightly coupled. A disruption in the Gulf spreads quickly into oil and gas price hikes, inflation, recession, and social fragmentation worldwide.

What's happening is is global loss, but we do not see any rational objective here. What is going on? 

Glossary
Escalation laddera structured sequence of conflict stages where each step increases intensity and risk
Systemic riskrisk that spreads across interconnected systems rather than remaining localised, becoming uncontrollable. 


2. Europe Caught Between Freedom and Security 

Into this comes the Belgian Prime Minister’s complaint. Europe is funding the war in Ukraine, yet is absent from negotiations.

The phrase “it is not normal” is revealing. It signals not outrage, but a slightly pathetic recognition of Europe's weakness.

Europe finds itself in a structurally subordinate position. It contributes financially and bears economic consequences, yet strategic decisions are taken elsewhere. This is not an accident. It reflects the architecture of NATO and the post war Atlantic system.

In practical terms, Europe is exposed to:

  • Energy shocks
  • Refugee flows
  • Economic disruption

Yet it lacks any decisive influence over war termination. It is divided, irresolute, lacks military force, is paralysed and excluded from a say in its future. 

This makes it illegitimate as far as the peoples are concerned. If you pay, you expect a voice. If you do not have a voice, you do not have sovereignty.

Glossary
Strategic autonomythe ability of a state or bloc to make independent defence and foreign policy decisions
Vassalisationa condition where a state retains formal independence but lacks real strategic control


3. Orbán And The Geography Problem

Viktor Orbán cuts through the rhetoric with a blunt observation: Russia is permanent.

Geography does not change with ideology. Europe sits next to Russia. Energy flows, trade routes, and security realities follow that grounded fact.

Orbán’s argument is therefore structural and realistic, not ideological. Stability requires integration, not eternal exclusion. Security cannot be built indefinitely against a neighbour that cannot be moved... Or you get is instability. 

This reflects an older European logic. Balance of power rather than permanent confrontation.

  • Geography pushes Europe toward Russia
  • Security pulls Europe towards America

This contradiction sits at the heart of Europe’s dilemma.

Glossary
Security architecturethe framework of alliances and institutions that shape regional stability
Balance of powera system where states maintain equilibrium to prevent dominance by any single power


4. The American Strategy Revealed

Now let's step back and join the dots on the longer timeline.

Three key reference points:

  • Wesley Clark, 2007 – sequential regime change thinking
  • Brookings, 2009 – structured options to weaken Iran
  • RAND, 2019 – methods to extend Russia

Individually, these are policy discussions, that seen as a whole they form a pattern.

The Glenn Diesen - Brian Berletic discussion makes the link explicit. Policy papers are not abstract. They are blueprints that evolve into strategy, doctrine, operations and action. 

The pattern suggests:

  • Target regional powers
  • Prevent consolidation across Eurasia
  • Apply pressure through proxies*, sanctions, and war

This aligns closely with an updated version of Mackinder’s classic geopolitical thesis. Control or fragment Eurasia, and global dominance follows:

Who rules East Europe commands the Heartland;
who rules the Heartland commands the World-Island;
who rules the World-Island commands the world.

Glossary
Grand strategylong term coordination of military, economic and political tools to achieve dominance
Mackinder theorythe idea that control of Eurasia determines global power

ISR (Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance) - the systematic collection and analysis of information about an adversary through observation, monitoring, and data gathering, used to guide military decisions and targeting


5. The Multipolar Threat And The Rise of China

The deeper layer is China. Brian Berletic highlights a critical point. The ultimate constraint on US dominance is the rise of China as a fully integrated industrial, financial, and energy independent power.

From this we can understand why :

  • Iran matters as an energy node
  • Russia matters as a strategic and resource base
  • The importance of The Middle East in providing the primary input to industry 
  • Eurasia as an integrated system 

Disrupt these, and China’s rise slows.

The strategy described is not simply about individual conflicts, it is about preventing and disrupting the emergence of a coherent alternative system.

Energy is central - restrict energy flows and you will restrict growth. Target infrastructure, and you reshape global trade. The ultimate aim is to throttle Chinese growth and stall a multi polar world. 

This is geoeconomics at scale.

Glossary
Multipolar worlda global system with several major centres of power rather than one dominant state
Geoeconomicsthe use of economic tools such as energy, trade, and sanctions to achieve geopolitical goals


6. Continuity Across Presidencies

One of the most striking observations is continuity.

From Bush to Obama to Trump, the trajectory remains pretty consistent - tactics may change, rhe language used certainly changes, but the direction persists. 

This raises an uncomfortable question about democracy.

If strategic outcomes remain stable regardless of electoral change, then where does real power sit... Not with the people?

Brian Berletic suggests that:

  • Corporate and financial interests, through lobby groups, shape long term policy
  • Think tanks develop frameworks
  • Governments implement variations of the same agenda

The reality is of very limited choices at the urns, the breaking of campaign promises, the continuity across the electoral cycles.

Glossary
Policy continuitythe persistence of strategic direction across different political administrations
Think tankan organisation that produces policy research and strategic recommendations


7. Europe’s Strategic Trap

Europe now faces a narrow choice that can be resumed to a choice between freedom or security.

Remain aligned with the Atlantic system and accept limited sovereignty; or attempt strategic independence and accept higher risk.

Constraints are real:

  • Military dependence on the US
  • Fragmented political structure and EU impotence 
  • Energy vulnerability

This is why many complaints continually emerge but change does not follow.

Europe is too large to ignore, but too divided to act independently, with the result being paralysis. And the EU leadership knows this but can do nothing. 

Glossary
Dependency structurea system where one actor relies on another for critical capabilities
Strategic paralysisinability to act decisively due to conflicting objectives or constraints


8. The Emerging Inflection Point

The United States may be pushing multiple fronts simultaneously - surely Iran, Russia, and China represent a scale of challenge that stretches resources too far.

History suggests that empires often fail not from defeat, but from debt, overreach abroad and fragmentation at home.

If that is the case, a turning point may come where:

  • Costs exceed benefits
  • Allies question alignment
  • Multipolar structures strengthen faster than they can be disrupted

At that point, Europe may find space to reposition itself, though this requires a general awakening. 

Glossary
Overextensiona condition where a power stretches its resources beyond sustainable limits
Inflection point a moment where a trend changes direction or accelerates rapidly


9. Bottom Line

This is the core reality.

America seeks to preserve its primacy.
China rises.
Russia resists.
Iran takes the pressure and escalates.
Europe hesitates.

And the world moves, step by step, up an escalation ladder, with America falling into an "escalation trap", as Robert Pape calls it.

The tragedy is that what seems like a completely irrational and utterly pointless War, may be entirely logical within the system that created it.


10. References

Why Iran GROUND INVASION IS Likely COMING (Robert Pape interview)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zfyllo2Qiq8

Europe Paying For War But Not At The Table (Sebastian commentary on De Wever and Orbán)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mPEXMGCfws8

Glenn Diesen Interviews Brian Berletic On US Strategy And Multipolar War
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4rHhRNaH9LI

Gen Wesley Clark Weighs Presidential Bid And Discusses US War Plans (Democracy Now, 2 March 2007)
https://www.democracynow.org/2007/3/2/gen_wesley_clark_weighs_presidential_bid

Which Path To Persia? Options For A New American Strategy Toward Iran (Brookings Institution, 2009)
https://www.brookings.edu/articles/which-path-to-persia-options-for-a-new-american-strategy-toward-iran/

Which Path To Persia? Full Report PDF (Brookings Institution, June 2009)
https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/06_iran_strategy.pdf

Extending Russia: Competing From Advantageous Ground (RAND Corporation, 2019)
https://www.rand.org/pubs/research_reports/RR3063.html

Extending Russia Full Report PDF (RAND Corporation, 2019)
https://www.rand.org/content/dam/rand/pubs/research_reports/RR3000/RR3063/RAND_RR3063.pdf

De Wever Confirms Support For Ukraine While Questioning Europe’s Role (The Brussels Times, 2026)
https://www.brusselstimes.com/belgium/2031297/de-wever-confirms-100-belgian-support-for-ukraine

No Appetite In EU For Renewed Energy Deals With Russia, Kallas Says (Reuters, 17 March 2026)
https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/no-appetite-eu-energy-deals-with-russia-kallas-says-2026-03-17/

Orbán: Russia Should Remain Part Of Europe’s Security, Energy And Trade Systems (Novinite, 2026)
https://www.novinite.com/articles/237577/Orban%3A%2BRussia%2BShould%2BRemain%2BPart%2Bof%2BEurope%E2%80%99s%2BSecurity%2C%2BEnergy%2C%2Band%2BTrade%2BSystems

Orbán Says Russia Must Be Included In Europe’s Future Systems (TASS, 2026)
https://tass.com/world/2103567


Wednesday, 18 March 2026

IRAN WAR REALITIES

18 March 2026

IRAN WAR REALITIES: POWER, PERCEPTIONS AND THE GLOBAL CONSEQUENCES


https://www.youtube.com/live/btfqR-LV7sk?si=OwfSXExqZSp4K9cf

https://youtu.be/Q3Hy-qVJB6A?si=3OaBmsu-Q1qmNZtL


A long-standing narrative casts Iran as the central threat in West Asia and globally, yet the deeper reality is that rivalry with Israel has been the cause of global insecurity since the start of the Cold War, when both emerged as competing regional powers. 

The present conflict which started on 28th February reveals a stark asymmetry. Iran cannot strike the American homeland, yet it holds decisive leverage over global energy flows through the Strait of Hormuz. Iran is targeting the global economy rather than seeking outright military victory.

For the United States, Netanyahu played a psychologically thrilling a game by selling Donald Trump the idea that a fight with Iran would produce a quick, clean and decisive outcome. In fact Netanyahu, understanding Trump's psychology, laid a strategic trap . For Israel, even partial degradation of Iran may already constitute success as it would set a random back a decade. 

Meanwhile, inside Iran, war is likely to strengthen hardline control rather than weaken the regime.

The result is a familiar but dangerous pattern. Military action intended to resolve instability instead deepens it, with consequences extending far beyond the region into global markets, political alignments, and the balance of power itself.


1. Why There Has Been Persistent Hostility Towards Iran

Iran and Israel were not always enemies. For decades, Iran was central to Israel’s security architecture, supplying oil and acting as a key non-Arab ally. This aligned with Israel’s strategy of balancing hostile Arab states through peripheral alliances.

The rupture came with the 1979 revolution. However, the decisive shift into sustained hostility occurred after the Cold War. With the Soviet Union gone and Arab nationalism weakened, Iran and Israel emerged as rival regional powers.

At that point, Israeli leadership, including figures such as Benjamin Netanyahu, actively pushed Washington to reframe Iran as a primary threat. The narrative that Iran was perpetually “two years away” from a nuclear weapon dates from this period.

From this perspective, hostility was not inevitable. It was constructed to maintain Israel’s strategic relevance in US foreign policy and to block any rapprochement between Washington and Tehran.

Geostrategicrelating to power shaped by geography and regional positioning
Rapprochementrestoration of relations between previously hostile states
Threat Inflationexaggerating a danger to justify policy or action


2. Whether Iran Is Truly The World’s Leading Sponsor Of Terrorism

The claim rests heavily on how “terrorism” is defined. If it means supporting groups opposed by the United States or Israel, then Iran fits the label.

If it means sponsoring attacks like 9/11 or operations in Europe and America, the evidence is weak. In fact, much of that activity has historically been linked to Sunni jihadist networks, often with roots in US-aligned Gulf states.

The credibility of the “terrorism list” itself is questioned. Groups have been removed after lobbying campaigns, despite histories of violence, and later used in operations aligned with Western or Israeli interests.

The conclusion is blunt. The label functions as a political tool rather than a consistent analytical category.

Terrorismuse of violence against civilians for political aims
Proxy Groupsnon-state actors supported by states to pursue strategic goals
Political Labellingassigning labels to shape perception rather than reflect reality


3. Whether The Iranian Population Supports The Regime

Support for the Iranian system is limited but far from negligible. Around 15–20% form a highly committed base, numbering in the tens of millions.

A second group, often younger, is strongly opposed and increasingly radicalised by failed reform efforts.

The decisive factor is the large middle. This group does not support the regime but rejects regime change imposed through foreign bombing or invasion.

This middle bloc prevents collapse. It blocks both internal revolution and external overthrow, ensuring continuity despite dissatisfaction.

Theocracypolitical system governed by religious authority
Reform Failureinability of gradual change to meet public expectations
Middle Majoritylarge non-aligned segment stabilising a system


4. Why War Strengthens Rather Than Weakens Iran

External attack does not fragment Iran. It consolidates it.

War energises regime supporters and shifts power towards hardline institutions such as the Revolutionary Guard. Even critics of the regime resist foreign intervention.

The likely outcome is not regime collapse but a more repressive and centralised state. War eliminates moderates and empowers those arguing that compromise with the West is futile.

Rally Effectpopulation unites under external threat
Hardline Consolidationstrengthening of authoritarian factions during conflict
Repressionincreased control over political and social life


5. Whether The War Was A Miscalculation

The argument is asymmetric.

From Israel’s perspective, particularly under Netanyahu, the objective was not necessarily regime change. It was to degrade Iran and permanently block US–Iran diplomacy. Even a partial setback for Iran counts as success.

From the US perspective, the operation appears as a strategic miscalculation. It assumed rapid collapse, underestimated Iranian resilience, and failed to define a viable endgame.

This creates a divergence. What is a tactical success for Israel becomes a strategic trap for the United States.

Strategic Divergence allies pursuing different end goals
Degradationweakening an adversary without defeating it
Endgamedefined objective and exit strategy in conflict


6. The Role Of Trump And Political Psychology

Donald Trump’s decision-making is framed as highly outcome-driven. He avoids prolonged, messy conflicts but is receptive to actions framed as quick, decisive victories.

This creates an opening. By presenting Iran as weak and near collapse, advocates of war made the operation appear low-risk and high-reward.

Previous decisions reinforced this pattern. Moves such as recognising Jerusalem or killing Soleimani did not trigger immediate catastrophe, reinforcing a belief in consequence-free escalation.

The result was overconfidence. The expectation of rapid Iranian capitulation proved false, leaving no coherent Plan B beyond continued bombing.

Overconfidence Biasoverestimating likelihood of success
Strategic Framingpresenting actions in a way that influences decisions
Plan B Failureabsence of fallback strategy when initial assumptions fail


7. Whether The United States Is Acting Independently

The analysis is blunt.

Statements from US officials indicate that Washington entered the conflict partly because Israeli actions made retaliation likely. Instead of restraining escalation, the US chose to join it.

This suggests a reactive posture. Rather than controlling the timeline, the US allowed Israeli decisions to shape its own involvement.

The implication is uncomfortable. US policy appears influenced, if not driven, by Israeli strategic priorities rather than independent assessment of American interests.

Strategic Autonomyability of a state to act independently in its own interest
Escalation Entrapmentbeing drawn into conflict by an ally’s actions
Policy Captureexternal influence shaping national decision-making


8. Control Of The Strait Of Hormuz

Iran’s strongest leverage is not symbolic but economic.

Control over the Strait of Hormuz allows Iran to disrupt global oil flows. Countries seeking passage have negotiated directly with Tehran, not Washington, indicating where practical control lies.

Military options to reopen the strait carry high risk. US naval forces would need to enter missile range, exposing them to significant losses.

This shifts the balance. Iran may lack global reach, but it controls a critical node in the global system.

Chokepointnarrow passage controlling major trade flows
Maritime Denialpreventing access to sea routes
Leverageability to influence outcomes through control of key assets


9. The Real Battlefield: The Global Economy

Iran is not primarily trying to defeat Israel militarily.

Instead, it targets the most vulnerable pressure point: the global economy. By disrupting Gulf energy flows and regional production, it creates cascading economic damage.

Estimates already indicate severe contractions in Gulf economies, with knock-on effects across Asia and beyond. Fuel shortages and disruptions are appearing within weeks.

This is strategic logic. Economic pain is faster and more decisive than military attrition.

Economic Warfareusing economic disruption as a weapon
Shock Transmissionrapid spread of economic disruption across systems
Systemic Risk threat to the stability of an entire system


10. How The Conflict Is Likely To End

A clean victory is unlikely.

Iran is unlikely to reopen the Strait of Hormuz without concessions, particularly sanctions relief. Without this, it would emerge weaker and vulnerable to future attacks.

The most plausible outcome is a negotiated settlement mediated by external powers. Public narratives may claim victory, but the substance will reflect compromise.

The deeper consequence is structural. Rather than weakening the Iranian system, the war is likely to strengthen hardline control and reduce prospects for internal reform.

Sanctions Reliefeasing of economic restrictions imposed by other states
Negotiated Settlementagreement reached through diplomacy rather than force
Authoritarian Entrenchmentstrengthening of a centralised, repressive system


IF THIS GOES NUCLEAR

18 March 2026

Whether you're a Boy Scout or given to panic attacks, here in no particular priority order are some things worth thinking about :

1. Immediate Blast And Thermal Effects

  • Radius of destruction
  • Firestorms and burns
  • Urban vs rural exposure

2. Radiation Exposure

  • Initial ionising radiation
  • Fallout patterns and wind direction
  • Short vs long-term health effects

3. Fallout And Shelter Strategy

  • Need for shielding (concrete, underground)
  • Duration of sheltering (hours vs weeks)
  • Access to food, water, sanitation

4. Geographic Risk Assessment

  • Distance from likely targets
  • Proximity to military bases, ports, cities
  • Prevailing winds and weather systems

5. Supply Chain Disruption

  • Fuel shortages
  • Food availability
  • Medical supplies and pharmacies

6. Financial System Impact

  • Banking access and liquidity
  • Currency stability
  • Gold, cash, and alternative stores of value

7. Energy Shock

  • Oil and gas supply collapse
  • Electricity outages
  • Transport paralysis

8. Government Response And Controls

  • Martial law
  • Movement restrictions
  • Rationing systems

9. Communication Breakdown

  • Internet outages
  • Mobile network disruption
  • Access to reliable information

10. Evacuation vs Shelter-In-Place

  • Timing decisions
  • Transport availability
  • Border closures

11. Health System Collapse

  • Hospital overload
  • Lack of emergency services
  • Disease outbreaks

12. Social Stability And Security

  • Panic and crowd behaviour
  • Crime and looting
  • Community cooperation vs breakdown

13. Geopolitical Escalation

  • Risk of wider war (global powers)
  • NATO / US / Russia / China involvement
  • Secondary strikes

14. Long-Term Environmental Impact

  • Contaminated land and water
  • Agricultural collapse
  • Nuclear winter risk

15. Personal Preparedness

  • Emergency supplies
  • Documentation and identification
  • Family communication plan

16. Psychological And Moral Factors

  • Stress and decision-making under uncertainty
  • Maintaining discipline and routine
  • Ethical choices in crisis

17. Exit Routes And Safe Havens

  • Viable destinations
  • Visa and entry restrictions
  • Transport corridors

18. Information And Misinformation

  • Propaganda and panic narratives
  • Verifying sources
  • Decision-making under uncertainty

19. Timing And Early Warning Signals

  • Escalation indicators
  • Military movements
  • Diplomatic breakdowns

20. Recovery And Reconstruction Horizon

  • Duration of disruption
  • Economic rebuilding
  • Return to normality timelines

Sunday, 15 March 2026

MORAL DECADENCE PRECEDES CIVILISATIONAL COLLAPSE

15 March 2026

Trying to understand Trump - an aberration or normal End of Empire decadence and decline? 

End of Empire thesis 

Rise of empire → expansion and wealth → decadence and inequality → crisis → collapse → regime change

Economic expansion
→ Imperial overstretch
→ Economic crisis
→ Political crisis
→ Social fragmentation
→ Moral decadence
→ Regime change.

Go to offset 9.32. 

This clip shows people who are happy and relaxed, knowing that they are doing what they believe is right and, in the local spirit of martyrdom, ready to meet their maker if it saves their country.

Compare that with the people in this video, who are partying somewhere in a basement:


For anyone looking for historical parallels of moral decadence preceding civilisational collapse, is this not reminiscent of the twin cities of Sodom and Gomorrah?

Unconventional sexual behaviour and violence, mobs disrupting public life, abuse of immigrants, disregard for justice, and a general atmosphere of indulgence and cruelty.

This is another end-times type of story that could become our fate. In the biblical story the tale ends with divine destruction of hell fire and brimstone.

What about the moral decline of Rome? Banquets, strange sexual practices, cruel gladiatorial spectacles in the circus, loss of patriotism, civic duty and military discipline, and extreme inequality between the aristocracy and the people.

Is this what awaits us in the fall of the American empire? Are we almost there already?

It was similar under Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette. Gambling, fashion and lavish banquets, with the aristocracy living completely detached from what was happening in the lives of ordinary people.

It was also the same kind of moral and administrative corruption that set in among the Ottomans well before the First World War: the sale of public offices, tax farming, etc etc.

The end-of-empire idea is that decadence, as one might call it, is a symptom of decline, not a cause of it. It is the familiar hundred-year rise-and-fall story of societies (rebuilding, awakening, unraveling and Neil Howe's crisis of the fourth turning). Towards the end, continuous expansion becomes too costly to sustain. Economic crisis leads to political crisis. Inequality and immigration lead to fragmentation and fighting. Amid the chaos and disorder, moral and behavioural norms break down, simply because the system has already become unstable. The final step is regime change and the emergence of a new Order.

Saturday, 14 March 2026

WAR, JUSTICE AND MIGRATION - THREE WAYS OF SEEING A FOREVER WAR

14 March 2026

WAR, JUSTICE AND MIGRATION 

Three ways of seeing the same conflict. We're talking about the war against Iran but we could be talking about any of the wars that America has been involved in in the last 70 years. Let's take these perspectives one by one. 

1. WAR refers to a historical and geopolitical perspective.
This view asks how wars begin, why they repeat, and what large forces such as empire, energy, resources, grand even global strategy, power and geography are driving them. It looks at long repeat-with-variations historical patterns and asks how wars might eventually end.

2. JUSTICE refers to the legal and moral viewpoint.
This perspective focuses on rules and responsibility. It asks who committed crimes, who violated the laws - of war and international and human rights, and who should be held accountable. It relies on institutions such as the United Nations and treaties like the Geneva Conventions.

3. MIGRATION refers to the domestic political standpoint.
This perspective looks at the consequences of wars rather than the particular war itself. Conflicts destroy societies and push people to move elsewhere. Immigration into Europe as an example and the UK more specifically, then becomes a major political issue of the home front. Writers such as Douglas Murray or Eric Zemmour discuss this angle under the heading of the Great Replacement. Some historians looking for repeat patterns note that large migration waves often appear in the later phases of empires.

WAR – why the conflict exists
JUSTICE – who is responsible for crimes
MIGRATION – how the conflict affects societies far away. 

THREE WAYS PEOPLE LOOK AT THE SAME WAR

When people talk about the wars in West Asia, they often think they are arguing about the same thing. In reality they are usually looking at the same events from three very different angles. Once you notice these angles it becomes much easier to understand why people disagree.

1. The first angle is the history, macro-economics and geopolitics view. People seeing a conflict this way are stepping back and looking at "the big picture". They ask about the shared life cycle of Empires, how this conflict started, how this empire is shaping the world or particular regions, and why similar struggles keep repeating. Historians such as Arnold J. Toynbee often looked at history in this broader way. The aim is not only to come to conclusions about events, but to understand the deeper forces behind them, and perhaps to find workable political arrangements around security issues that could create a lasting peace.

2. The second angle is the legal and moral view. People using this lens ask straightforward questions: who committed crimes, who broke the rules of war / international law / human rights, and who should be punished. They look at reports from organisations such as the United Nations and the Geneva Conventions. Their main concern is justice in the legal sense - crime & punishment of individuals. Civilians should not be killed, prisoners should not be abused, and those who break these rules should be held responsible. 

3. The third angle is the immigration and domestic politics view. Many people in Europe and North America worry less about the details of the war and more about its consequences at home. Wars in far away places destroy economies and societies, and when that happens many people leave their countries to search for safety and work elsewhere, often in the Metropole. Large migrations then shape politics inside countries such as Britain and France. 

Writers like Douglas Murray and broadcasters like Eric Zemmour have argued that mass immigration raises serious questions about national identity, borders and social stability in native Western societies, even that certain immigrant groups desire to take over and change the system itself. From a different angle, some historians observe that large migration flows often appear during the later stages of empires, when economic pressures such as the need for additional and low-cost labour, begin to destabilise the entire system.

4. These three perspectives look at the same events but ask different questions. One asks why the conflict exists and how it might end. Another asks who committed crimes. The third asks how distant wars affect everyday life inside Western countries. Recognising these different viewpoints helps explain why people sometimes talk past each other even though they are discussing the same events.

Glossary
Geopolitics – the study of how geography, resources and power influence international politics.


REFERENCES

1. WAR – THE HISTORICAL, MACRO AND GEOPOLITICAL PERSPECTIVE

This approach asks why wars start, why they repeat, and what large forces such as empire, geography, energy, resources and human power are driving them.

Best book

The Revenge of Geography

• Clear explanation of how geography shapes power and conflict.
• Explains why certain regions repeatedly become battlefields.
• Accessible but serious.
• Very useful for understanding West Asia and great power rivalry.

Reference
Kaplan, Robert D. (2012) The Revenge of Geography.

Best YouTube video

John Mearsheimer
“The Causes and Consequences of the Ukraine War”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JrMiSQAGOS4

• Famous lecture explaining how great power politics works.
• Shows how geopolitical analysis differs from moral or legal arguments.
• Very clear explanation of how states behave in an anarchic international system.

Another best video 

The clearest video explaining the macroeconomic side of empire, debt and war comes from Ray Dalio.

How The Economic Machine Works & The Changing World Order

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xguam0TKMw8

This presentation summarises the argument later developed in Dalio’s book Principles for Dealing with the Changing World Order.

The video is widely viewed on Youtube because it explains complex historical patterns in straightforward and visual terms.

Dalio’s framework links economics, empire and war through a repeating historical cycle.

He argues that great powers tend to follow a pattern:

First, a nation becomes rich and productive.

Second, its currency becomes dominant in global trade.

Third, financial markets expand and debt grows.

Fourth, internal inequality and political conflict increase.

Fifth, geopolitical rivalry intensifies and wars become more likely.

Financial overstretchAt that stage the empire often becomes financially overstretched. Military commitments increase while borrowing, and fiscal and trade debt levels, rise, weakening the system from within.

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WHY DEBT AND WAR ARE CONNECTED

Dalio’s key insight is that wars are often financed by debt and money creation.

When a country fights large wars it must pay for:

• military production

• soldiers and logistics

• reconstruction

• economic disruption

If tax revenues cannot cover these costs governments borrow or print money. Over time, the cost benefit analysis works against them and inflation can weaken the currency and the financial system supporting the empire.

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HOW THIS FITS THE “WAR – JUSTICE – MIGRATION” FRAMEWORK

Dalio’s work sits mainly inside the WAR viewpoint, the economic, historical and geopolitical perspective.

His analysis focuses on:

• macroeconomic power

• debt cycles

• great power competition

• imperial rise and decline

In that sense he is asking the question:

Why do empires fight wars and eventually lose their dominance?

Glossary
Geopolitics – the study of how geography, power and resources shape international relations.

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2. JUSTICE – THE LEGAL AND MORAL PERSPECTIVE

This regard focuses on international law, human rights and moral responsibility in war.

Best book

Just and Unjust Wars

• One of the most influential modern books on the ethics of war.
• Explains when war may be justified and what conduct in war is allowed.
• Widely used in universities, military academies and diplomatic circles.

Reference
Walzer, Michael (1977) Just and Unjust Wars.

Best YouTube video

Philippe Sands
“International Law and War Crimes”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H9J6C0hKp9k

• Clear explanation of war crimes, accountability and international courts.
• Helps explain how institutions such as the International Criminal Court work.

Glossary
Just War Theory – a tradition of ethical reasoning about when war is justified and how it should be conducted.

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3. MIGRATION – THE DOMESTIC POLITICAL PERSPECTIVE

This angle focuses on how wars abroad produce population movements and how migration then affects metropolitan politics ie inside Western countries themselves.

Best book

The Strange Death of Europe

• One of the most widely discussed books on immigration and cultural change in Europe.
• Argues that large migration flows raise questions about identity, borders and political stability - all responsibilities the government loses control of as relations internationalise.
• Frequently referenced in debates about migration in Britain and Europe.

Reference
Murray, Douglas (2017) The Strange Death of Europe.

You might also see similar themes in the work of Éric Zemmour.

Best YouTube video

Douglas Murray
“The Future of Europe and Immigration”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0l9pKk1Fh8Q

• Clear explanation of how migration debates are framed in Europe.
• Explores cultural, demographic and political arguments around immigration.

Glossary
Migration – the movement of people from one country or region to another, often driven by war, economic hardship or political instability.

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WHY COMBINING THESE THREE VIEWPOINTS COULD BE INTERESTING

Taken together, these three perspectives show how debates between deaf people you don't understand each other are futile and ennervating, with "contestants" talking past each other, giving the debates a strong emotional colouring, at the expense of reason and relevance.

WAR explains why conflicts start.
JUSTICE asks who is responsible for crimes.
MIGRATION looks at how the consequences hit the lives of ordinary people in Western societies.

Each perspective answers a different question, which is why people can argue intensely but futily, while actually discussing three different aspects of the same reality.