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Mic Drop

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Everything posted by Mic Drop

  1. The world has gone insane.... Mundane stuff is being commoditized as never before as people are trying to attribute value to every single small iota of life amidst the foundational cash being devalued like never before in generations. Stay tuned for more absurdities I'm sure. Soon we will be asked to post $ in order to make posts online in forums etc.
  2. Greta Thunberg Says Germany Should Keep Its Nuclear Plants Open
  3. This week has seen the Bank of England expanding their rescue efforts in the hope of stopping fire sales but then also announced yesterday that these measures will only run to the end of the week. Higher interest rates have been hitting the UK housing market and this means, unusually for the UK, that repaying the current 6% 5-year fixed mortgage rate will actually work out more expensive than paying rent. The UK’s unemployment rate has fallen to its lowest since 1974 which might sound like positive news, but low unemployment also fuels inflation.
  4. There are three main reasons with individual complexities: Existing infrastructure was designed to use specific combinations of oil. Not all crude oil is the same, and the chemical properties vary significantly depending on which basin it was produced from. America produces primarily “light” oils while Canada and Russia produce “heavier” oils. American refinery infrastructure (the massive chemical plants that break the crude oil into gas, gasoline, diesel, heating oil, solids, etc.) was designed to refine a blend of lighter and heavier crude oil. Replacing this infrastructure, especially in the current American legislative environment, would be extremely expensive. The Jones Act: it is generally illegal to ship things from one U.S. port to another unless the vessel is domestically owned and flagged. Because the vessels must be owned, operated, and flagged domestically, the cost of operation increases dramatically to comply with environmental, labor, and safety laws. This is for a number of national policy reasons, but it does limit domestic transport of oil to rail, pipeline, or truck, all of which are more expensive than by water. If, however, the vessel is carrying oil from a foreign port, it does not have to comply with any of these regulations. It is important to remember that transportation commonly accounts for anywhere from 20%-80% of the total cost per unit depending on the consumer. Strategic underproduction: unlike almost every other major oil producing nation, the energy industry is not nationalized in the United States. As a result of this, private companies must lease the mineral right from either private or public land. The federal government has long been cautious to limit how much development of federal “land” they allow each year in order to ensure that America is the last nation to run out of oil. The vast majority of American oil lies offshore in federally managed waters, meaning that the government determines when and how quickly to lease out plots. All lease auctions stopped for during the first year-ish of Biden’s presidency in an effort to encourage the transition to renewables, but the Inflation a reduction Act partially resumed this process to curb rising oil costs as Russia continues to harm global economies, ensure that companies continue to invest in infrastructure so that there is still domestic expertise, and ensure that there would be enough support for the bill.
  5. Because it's cheaper. Because the US is trying really hard to be the last one to run out of oil.
  6. When the refineries were built the crude that was readily available was the heavy crude. There was not a lot of light crude until the fracking boom. It’s also very costly to retrofit a refinery to change the crude they can use.
  7. The Jones Act strikes again! Simply: if you are shipping something on a boat from one US port to another, it has to be on a US-made boat, staffed by US sailors, and flying under the US flag. For tax, labor, and industrial policy reasons all three of these are extremely rare by themselves and nearly impossible all together. It is far more advantageous for Texas to export oil abroad, and California to import from Saudi Arabia, then to send a boat from Houston to Long Beach. https://www.reuters.com/markets/commodities/oil-companies-work-around-jones-act-supply-us-fuel-markets-2022-08-18/
  8. The mother had the baby in her arms. They were all playing fetch something triggered them to attack the older child (toddler). Mom tried to get them away from the toddler and they redirected to the baby in her arms. First responders stated the baby was pulled in half. The attack lasted ten minutes.
  9. Yet amid all the economic doom & gloom, the world economy is still projected to grow about 2.5% this year, even amid junk bonds and debt bubbles devastating countless individuals. Is this calculation just some illusion generated by sky-high inflation rates and widespread currency devaluation?
  10. Update: Global shipping continues to plummet, as rates from China to the U.S. have gotten almost as bad as the height of the COVID scare. Are people basically done buying things they don’t need? Or are they stretched so thin that they can’t even afford the things they do need?
  11. Update: Much of the world is leaning into a debt crisis that could upend our economic “order.” Rising interest rates on top of climate devastation, supply difficulties, labor problems, housing crookery, widespread cost of living increases, and societal unrest are driving a dangerous & negative feedback loop.
  12. OPEC+ cuts oil production Fuel prices are set to rise even further with unplanned cuts to oil extraction, as OPEC+ is allegedly considering. As Europe struggles with energy for the long, nuclear? winter, the green transition may never arrive. Coal demand is up, and prices are the highest they’ve been since 2005.
  13. The news is in: the Nordstream pipeline bombings were the largest one-time methane release on record—so far. Culpability has still not yet been established for the attacks.
  14. The United States (and much of the rest of the world) is in the grips of a full-blown mental health crisis, says this post and its many comments explaining why. Sometimes society seems so gaslit that any little spark could set us off. Go outside and take a long Doombreak if you need one; Collapse isn't going anywhere, except down.
  15. Canada’s maritime provinces will need a long time to recover from Hurricane Fiona, according to this weekly observation from Prince Edward Island. But amid the collapse of infrastructure and BAU, some people have taken comfort in the silver linings.
  16. The world’s richest man, Elon Musk changed his mind—again—and will be buying Twitter after all. The deal is now expected to close next Wednesday. If you think a billionaire 007 villain (?)—who’s getting involved in international affairs—taking over one of the world’s largest consent-manufacturing factories doesn’t pertain to Collapse, consider looking into the medieval history of the papacy, or the modern CIA/CCP.
  17. COVID isn’t going away either, and we will certainly see new diseases emerge—or old diseases like the avian flu worsening—as the earth gets warmer, the forests get smaller, and humans live closer and closer together. We may still be in the first act, and there will be no intermission. It’s going to be one hell of a show.
  18. Mic Drop

    Monkeypox

    Monkeypox has been detected in Vietnam for the first time. The American CDC says that monkeypox will be in the U.S. for at least a few years, although confirmed cases are still dropping.
  19. Eyes are on South Asia (India, Pakistan, Nepal, Tibet, Bangladesh), where melting Himalayan glaciers will threaten the region’s water supply over the coming decades. It will also contribute to landslides, flash flooding, forced displacement, and probably water wars. These ancient glaciers can only melt once.
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