Individual Economists

Israeli Army Seizing 'Strategic Positions' Deep Into Lebanon, North Of Litani River

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Israeli Army Seizing 'Strategic Positions' Deep Into Lebanon, North Of Litani River

Within a day after unleashing a devastating flurry of Monday airstrikes on Lebanon, Israeli ground forces have aggressively expanded the theater of operations inside Lebanon, violating a status quo by sending IDF ground troops across the "Yellow Line" which was established at the inception of the ceasefire.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced Tuesday that Israel is "intensifying operations" in Lebanon by taking strategic positions deeper into the country with a wave of offensives north of the Litani River.

IDF has systematically destroyed bridges across south Lebanon, via Reuters.

Officially, Tel Aviv is justifying the deep territorial grab as a "defensive" counter-measure against persistent Hezbollah drone strikes on occupation forces as well as communities in northern Israel.

"We are intensifying our operations in Lebanon. The IDF is operating with significant forces on the ground and taking control of strategically dominant positions. We are reinforcing the security buffer zone in order to protect the communities of northern Israel," Netanyahu has said in a fresh video released by his office.

"At the same time, we are carrying out a major national effort to advance creative and innovative solutions against explosive drones," he added, following a meeting with Defense Minister Israel Katz and IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir in Tel Aviv.

The ground offensive comes as hawkish Israeli cabinet members openly lobby for a substantial escalation of the war and permanent occupations deeper into sovereign Lebanese territory.

The high-ranking command structure apparently operates under the assumption that it can successfully force a 12 km buffer zone between Hezbollah and the Blue Line border (the 75-mile demarcation line established by the United Nations in June 2000).

Local Israeli media outlets are already questioning the strategic utility of the entire operation, pointing out that Hezbollah’s tactical drone fleet is widely believed to possess an operational range in excess of 30 km.

Hezbollah has been having success especially with fiber-optic cable drones which are not to susceptible to jamming, hacking, or other electronic warfare interception measures.

All of these developments mean that the Washington-mediated ceasefire is effectively dead, and as Hezbollah's asymmetric warfare is likely to ramp up in response.

via Bicom

The last couple days have also seen whole communities in Shia strongholds of south Beirut flee suburbs which are likely to be targeted in new IDF airstrikes - as has been the pattern of the last several years.

These developments could negatively impact US-Iran efforts to hammer out a final peace deal, which has been grinding on slowly, though it appears that potential return to full-scale regional war is unlikely, for now.

Tyler Durden Wed, 05/27/2026 - 22:10

Federal Government Floats NDAs For Employees In Leak Crackdown

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Federal Government Floats NDAs For Employees In Leak Crackdown

Authored by Zachary Stieber via The Epoch Times,

President Donald Trump's administration on May 26 floated a non-disclosure agreement (NDA) for federal employees who have access to what the government described as sensitive information.

The logo of the Office of Personnel Management in Washington on Feb. 13, 2025. Tierney L. Cross/Reuters

The proposed NDA says that employees may access "non-public, confidential, or proprietary information," such as personal health information and details relating to agency operations.

It states that employees understand they are required to follow laws and regulations governing confidential information and that they agree to "take all reasonable precautions to safeguard and protect Confidential Government Information from unauthorized disclosure."

Violating the agreement could lead to repercussions, including termination and civil or criminal penalties, according to the draft.

The Office of Personnel Management developed the NDA form in the wake of leaks, including the leak of information about the U.S. raid on Venezuela prior to American forces carrying it out, the office said in a notice set to be published on May 27.

"Federal employees do not have discretion to disclose Confidential Government Information outside of narrow circumstances prescribed by relevant authorities and implemented by procedures which may differ by agency," the notice states. "Unauthorized disclosures of Confidential Government Information disrupt agency operations and erode public trust."

In recent months, there have also been disclosures of personal information of about 4,500 employees of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, one of the agencies charged with enforcing immigration law, as well as leaks of planned immigration enforcement operations.

"In much of the private sector, employees handling sensitive business or customer information are routinely required to sign confidentiality agreements, and the federal government should not be held to a lower standard," Scott Kupor, director of the Office of Personnel Management, said in a statement.

"Americans should be able to trust that their personal data and sensitive government information are being handled responsibly. This proposal reinforces accountability across the federal workforce while helping agencies better protect against unauthorized disclosures."

The draft says that nothing in the agreement prohibits or restricts an employee from becoming a whistleblower or from making public details about possible wrongdoing.

If a disclosure violates the law, the employing agency may report the breach to law enforcement officials, per the draft.

It states that the agency "shall be entitled to seek equitable relief ... from any court of competent jurisdiction" and that the employee "assigns to the United States all royalties, remunerations, and emoluments that have resulted, will result, or may result from any disclosure, publication, or revelation of Government Information in violation of the terms of this Agreement."

Tyler Durden Wed, 05/27/2026 - 21:45

Federal Agents Seize 500 Pounds Of Cocaine From Oil Tanker

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Federal Agents Seize 500 Pounds Of Cocaine From Oil Tanker

U.S. authorities say they stopped a major cocaine shipment allegedly tied to a Mexican cartel after an oil tanker traveling from Ecuador was intercepted near Southern California, according to KTLA5

Roughly 227 kilograms — about 500 pounds — of cocaine were discovered aboard the Aquatravesia, a Liberian-flagged tanker owned by a Greek company, according to federal prosecutors. Investigators believe the drugs were meant to be transferred to cartel operatives waiting off the Mexican coast.

KTLA writes that the vessel had sailed from Ecuador earlier this month and was en route to the United States when investigators received intelligence that cocaine was being smuggled onboard.

Federal prosecutors charged Ceasar Tubay Gelacio Jr., a 43-year-old crew member from the Philippines, with importing a controlled substance. Authorities allege he obtained the narcotics in Ecuador and intended to move them during the ship’s voyage north.

According to court records, crew members eventually found hidden packages in the tanker’s garbage compartment. After questioning workers aboard the ship, the captain allegedly concluded Gelacio was connected to the drugs and secured the packages in another locked area.

Investigators say the captain was warned that armed boats linked to a Mexican cartel would attempt to meet the tanker roughly 80 nautical miles off Mexico during the night of May 14 and the following morning. Authorities also said backup crews were expected to intercept the vessel in Mexican waters if the original transfer failed.

The captain later reported hearing radio communications he believed came from cartel members trying to reach the ship before a potential boarding attempt.

U.S. officials directed the tanker to continue toward the Los Angeles-Long Beach port area, where federal agents boarded the vessel after it anchored offshore and seized the cocaine.

Gelacio was arrested Thursday and appeared in federal court the following day. Prosecutors said he faces at least 10 years in prison if convicted, with a possible maximum sentence of life.

Officials emphasized the case remains an allegation, and Gelacio is presumed innocent unless proven guilty in court.

Tyler Durden Wed, 05/27/2026 - 21:20

Texas AG Sues Discord For Deceiving Parents, Endangering Children

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Texas AG Sues Discord For Deceiving Parents, Endangering Children

Authored by Naveen Athrappully via The Epoch Times,

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a lawsuit against communications app Discord, alleging that the platform allows child predators to exploit children while falsely claiming child safety to parents.

“Discord presents itself to the world as a platform built on community, connection, and safety. It is not,” the lawsuit, filed on May 22 in the District Court of Collin County, Texas, said.

“Behind the safety pages and transparency pages, Discord built and maintains one of the internet’s most efficient hunting grounds for manipulation, grooming, and predatory behavior towards children. Discord did so knowingly, deliberately, and profitably.”

The design choices implemented on the communications platform make it easy for bad actors to locate vulnerable users, build trust quickly, and operate away from public view, the complaint said.

According to a Discord webpage, safety is at the “core of everything” the company does.

In another post, the company claims safety considerations are “fully integrated into our design process.” Discord also says that it has a “zero-tolerance policy” against individuals who engage in sexual grooming or exploitation of minors.

Such promises made to consumers, parents, and regulators were false, the lawsuit alleges.

Discord makes safety an “opt-in rather than default,” the complaint states.

“It chose to leave private servers invisible. It chose to staff its most critical safety function with unpaid volunteers. It chose to expire violations after 90 days. It chose to bury the block button. Discord chose profits and growth over the safety of children,” it states.

A 45-year-old can create a Discord account as a 13-year-old, and the platform has no reliable mechanism to detect or prevent such actions, according to the lawsuit.

While Discord allows channels to be age-restricted if a moderator wishes, this protection depends entirely on the self-reported birthdate entered when a user creates an account. The platform basically created an age-verification system “that a child can defeat in seconds,” the complaint said.

The lawsuit highlights multiple cases of minors being harmed by predators on Discord, including a 13-year-old boy who committed suicide in 2022 after being targeted by the 764 extremist network on the platform.

In another case, a 15-year-old boy committed suicide after he was groomed by a predator on Discord and Roblox to send sexually explicit images and videos, according to the lawsuit.

The complaint noted that Discord has made it into the “Dirty Dozen” list set up by the National Center on Sexual Exploitation for five straight years.

“Sexual abusers return to Discord again and again, thanks to this company’s reputation for lax rule enforcement and dangerous design,” the center said. “Even registered sex offenders have been charged for targeting kids on Discord.”

The lawsuit asks the court to declare Discord’s actions as “unlawful, deceptive, misleading, and unfair” and order the company to implement age verification requirements.

In an emailed statement to The Epoch Times, a Discord spokesperson said the lawsuit’s “characterization of Discord does not reflect the platform we have built or the investments we have made in user safety.”

According to the spokesperson, unlike social media platforms, Discord does not have any algorithmic feeds, infinite scroll, or public “likes” that push content to mass audiences.

“Our safety systems combine advanced technology and human-led investigations, alongside user reports to help identify accounts or spaces engaged in harmful activity, including sharing exploitative and child sexual abuse materials,” the spokesperson said.

“We provide teen users and their parents and guardians with important privacy and safety tools, including Teen Safety Assist and our Family Center. We look forward to collaborating with policymakers in working toward a safer online experience for all users on Discord and across the internet.”

Age Assurance Rollout

On Feb. 9, Discord announced it planned to roll out teen safety features globally to ensure a “safer and more inclusive experience” for users aged 13 and older.

This involves an “age assurance process” in which users must submit identification or agree to use facial age estimation technology. However, only in a minority of cases will age assurance be required, according to Discord.

As part of the update, users will have “teen-appropriate experience, with updated communication settings, restricted access to age-gated spaces, and content filtering that preserves the privacy and meaningful connections that define Discord,” the company said.

The updates were scheduled to take effect in March. But on Feb. 24, Discord said that the rollout had been extended to the second half of this year.

Meanwhile, Discord was one of the companies targeted by a recent letter from Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Chairman Andrew N. Ferguson, who asked the platform to comply with the Take It Down Act by May 19.

The Act requires platforms to set up a process that enables individuals, including children, to request the removal of intimate photos or videos shared without their consent. Platforms must make it easy for victims to submit such removal requests.

The FTC warned that it would “vigorously” enforce the Act, with each violation potentially resulting in civil penalties of $53,088.

Tyler Durden Wed, 05/27/2026 - 20:55

Hamas Confirms Death Of Its Top Military Commander In IDF Gaza Strike

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Hamas Confirms Death Of Its Top Military Commander In IDF Gaza Strike

Israel's military has just taken out a high-value target, with the confirmed death of the commander of Hamas's military wing, Mohammed Odeh.

He was targeted in a a strike on the Gaza Strip Tuesday, in an operation which injured dozens more bystanders, given a residential building in a very busy market area of Gaza City was obliterated.

via MSN

However, the IDF and Shin Bet security service sought to explain that Odeh used the civilian residential buildings as a hideout, but that his movements starting months ago were being tracked to that location.

By Wednesday, Hamas belatedly confirmed Odeh's death, along with his wife and two of his children.

Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said in a joint statement with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that the "commander of the armed wing of the Hamas terrorist organization in Gaza was eliminated yesterday and sent to meet his associates in the depths of hell."

"In the Prime Minister's name and in my own, congratulations to the IDF and the Shin Bet on the brilliant execution," Katz said.

"We committed ourselves to eliminating everyone who led the October 7 massacre, and that is what we will do: They are all marked for death, wherever they may be," the defense chief added.

According to more emerging details of the strike:

Tuesday's strike hit the upper three floors of the al-Kayali building in the center of Gaza City, where streets were busy with shoppers ahead of the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha.

Rescue teams rushed to the scene of the strikes but struggled to reach the upper floors because of the scale of the damage and congestion in the area.

Despite a Gaza ceasefire technically having long been in place, sporadic Israeli strikes and interventions in Gaza have continued for the last many months.

This past weekend saw IDF military actions in the enclave ramp up. For example on Sunday Reuters had confirmed new significant strikes on Gaza just as Washington unveiled that a tentative peace deal with Iran has been "largely negotiated" and is at the goal line:

Israeli strikes killed at least ‌three Palestinians in Gaza on Sunday, including two members of the Hamas-run police force, health officials said, in violence that underscored the fragility of a U.S.-brokered ceasefire.

Medics said an Israeli airstrike killed one person and wounded two others in the ​Maghazi refugee camp in central Gaza.

This Gaza escalation has been met with accusations that Israel could be trying to sabotage what it may see as a 'bad deal' with Tehran. 

Iran has long been trying to link a final peace framework to end to the war to the conflicts in Lebanon and Gaza - but Israel and Washington have consistently rejected this.

Tyler Durden Wed, 05/27/2026 - 20:30

Viruses For Dummies

Zero Hedge -

Viruses For Dummies

Authored by Jeffrey A. Tucker via The Epoch Times,

Over this past week, we've been subjected to a flurry of pandemic warnings. It's like the disease of the day: Bird flu, novavirus, m-pox, hantavirus, slap rash (did you miss that one?), and Ebola. A former director of the CDC just warned that this Ebola outbreak could become a pandemic.

Members of the Congo Scouts movement carry an Ebola awareness banner along a street during a public sensitisation campaign amid the Ebola outbreak in Bunia, Congo, on May 23, 2026. AP Photo/Moses Sawasawa

It sounds scary but that is literally impossible for reasons I will explain. My hope is that this article will allow you to know this too. My point is to rescue basic knowledge of infectious disease that every person knew in my grandmother's generation. The postwar period put huge emphasis on this in schooling. It was called public health in those days.

They knew much more than certified experts today.

To be sure, my training is in economics, not virology, not immunology, and not epidemiology. That makes me the ideal teller of the way to understand pathogens. Why? Because this is a subject about which I knew little six years ago but COVID caused me to dive deep into the literature and speed learn.

Shockingly, I now find that I know more than many supposed experts. Why would that be the case? Every profession these days, whether economics or epidemiology, is subject to epistemic capture. They have all created bubbles for themselves that are shaped by industrial forces. To really understand the topic in question often requires a complete outsider.

I'm going to break it down to three principles. If you stick with me, you will carry away a decoder ring to see through every media frenzy about infectious disease.

One, a milder exposure to a pathogen generates broad and lasting immunity against a stronger exposure. This of course is the principle behind vaccination but, as even Fauci once explained, there is no better immunity than that obtained by natural exposure. This principle has been known for thousands of years, documented even in Thucydides's History of the Peloponnesian War.

I learned it as a kid when I was exposed to chicken pox and gained lifetime immunity. Before the shot came along, exposure of the young kids gave a booster to adults to protect them against shingles.

This is why George Washington did not accept a smallpox variolation (earlier form of vaccination) even as the army under him often did: he had it as a young man. This is the reason the legendary milkmaids of centuries past had clear skin: exposure to cowpox insulated against smallpox. It's why workers in chicken factories are more immune to Bird flu. It's why kids should not be cocooned in germ-free environments, contrary to the fashion these days.

It's why there was so much death in the 1918 flu pandemic. Vast numbers of people due to war and travels were unexposed to the pathogen in question. Several flu seasons prior had gone by with low virulence and exposure. Returning soldiers confronted an immunologically naive population.

It's always dangerous to disturb natural exposure patterns within the social order. After a year of lockdowns, it's not a surprise that the population was more vulnerable to sickness than ever before. Hiding from widespread and mutating pathogens only makes one more vulnerable later. No population cell is more sickly than one that has been isolated from exposure, as centuries of experience show.

Two, with most pathogens, there is a negative correlation (an inverse relationship) between severity and prevalence. When one is up, the other is down. Severity refers to its virulence, its tendency to render cases, hospitalization, and death. It is measured by the case fatality rate or CFR. A pathogen does not arrive with a built-in CFR, like some computer algorithm. It depends on the level of population immunity (see above).

The CFR is different from the infection fatality rate (IFR), which indicates prevalence; that is, how much and how far a pathogenic infection spreads. Infections can be mild. They can even be without symptoms. The IFR is typically lower than the CFR. A high IFR means that the pathogen has a high probability of killing its host upon infection. A high CFR often indicates severe, obvious disease that leads to confirmed diagnosis - but it does not necessarily mean the pathogen is not spreading.

Already I knew something was fishy in the COVID-19 period when mass media conflated cases, infections, and exposures. All the charts we saw on "cases" were not really that; they were positive tests using a technology designed only to capture the presence of the virus, not its medical significance. It was all wildly misleading.

COVID-19 had a very low IFR but a medium-level severity. That is because it was and is an intelligent pathogen. Viruses with unimpressive performance kill their host quickly and thereby do not spread.

Ebola is the classic case. Killing one's host is not the most desirable outcome for a virus. "In ecological terms," writes Sunetra Gupta, "it constitutes a form of habitat destruction. When they kill their hosts, pathogens also kill themselves, and this is a disaster unless their progeny have already spread to another host."

Clever viruses like COVID minimize severity and so they can spread more broadly through the population - the common cold would be a good example. "By being less destructive, a bug may also enhance its chances of transmission," she explains.

Three, the tradeoff between severity and prevalence is subject to a condition called latency. This is the period of time in which the infected person experiences no symptoms and can thus spread the disease. With a typical cold or flu, that period is a few days during which you are infectious and do not know it. Your symptoms will last a few days beyond which you can infect others.

There are viruses that have long periods of latency, among them the one said to cause AIDS. That is why it was so deadly among the vulnerable population. Other peculiar viruses like the hantavirus spread from rats, but typically not between people, and have a long period of latency. It can take eight weeks for symptoms to manifest. It also tends to be true that the longer the latency, the more difficult it is for a virus to spread with casual contact.

When COVID-19 hit, it was the theory of Deborah Birx that SARS-CoV-2 had a two-week latency, which is why she claimed there was silent spread. As it turns out, she was wrong: the latency period is that which is more typical among coronaviruses, a few days.

Nearly all movies about pandemics have to game this point for dramatic purposes. There is invariably some deadly pathogen circulating that suddenly seizes a person who drops dead. Then others with whom that person had casual contact over the prior month start dropping dead. Then dead people are everywhere.

This is all fiction. So far as we have records, there has never been a pathogen that is very severe, very widespread, mutates fast, and carries an extended latency period of months. This is not an accident. It is a biological necessity. It is how we as human beings co-evolved with the microbial kingdom of which we are part.

We have survived because we have adapted alongside and as part of the microbial kingdom. It is not the enemy but essential to our survival. Every movie that posits some other scenario is making stuff up.

And by the way, this is even true of lab-created viruses like that which created COVID-19. It can be nasty, uncomfortable, frustrating, even scary. But even lab-created viruses adapt to the natural world, as we have seen. Alpha became Delta which became Omicron and eventually merged into being part of the seasonable landscape of our lives. This is why every pandemic burns itself out. It's a consequence of immunity born of exposure combined with mutations.

The best way to understand mutations and variants is by analogy to wardrobes of clothing and disguises. Some pathogens come with a vast collection. Malaria is an example. It is always mutating and changing, and so it becomes extremely difficult to chase down and finally to destroy with a vaccine. For many decades scientists assumed that they could get it under control but it was not to be.

It is also true for flu viruses, which have a different garb for every season. This is why the flu shot is not particularly effective and sometimes negative in its efficacy. An example of a virus with an unimpressive wardrobe is measles. It has only one uniform so it was possible to identify and finally to manage to near perfection with a vaccine. That is not to say that the vaccine is superior to natural infection - one infection creates lifetime immunity - because every pharmaceutical has downsides, often unanticipated ones.

As for the others with wide adaptability, there is no way against which they can be vaccinated, even in theory. Many people have tried for countless decades. It is simply not possible for very specific epidemiological reasons. Anyone who says otherwise is a charlatan, now and always. Period. Learn that lesson and spare yourself grief.

How likely is it that we will experience a deadly pathogen that wipes out large swaths of humanity through uncontrolled spread in a manner in which our bodies are unable to withstand? The chances are near zero.

Let's game this out with these observations:

  • Measles: severity low, prevalence high, latency short, mutability low
  • Flu: severity low, prevalence high, latency short, mutability high
  • Ebola: severity high, prevalence low, latency short, mutability medium-high
  • Hantavirus: severity high, prevalence low, latency long, mutability low
  • COVID: severity medium-low, prevalence high, latency short, mutability high
  • Rabies: severity extremely high, prevalence extremely low, latency short, mutability low
  • Norovirus: severity very low, prevalence high, latency short, mutability high
  • Malaria: severity high, prevalence high, latency short, mutability high

Notice among all those listed, only one seems to evade the mathematical logic of viruses; that is malaria. It is a wicked killer, beyond 600,000 people a year but also not really a virus. It is a parasite with a particular vector of invasion via mosquitos, which is why it is not a pandemic risk but rather a regional risk. For that reason, it does not belong on the list.

See how there is a logic to all this?

Why is it important that everyone - I mean everyone - have a basic understanding of the above? To bring not panic about pathogens but rather a calming wisdom. We evolved alongside pathogens. We understand them better than ever before. Our life experiences have granted us remarkable resilience. We should not be endlessly buffeted by the media winds of frenzy designed to elicit likes and clicks.

Why in the 21st century so many people have chosen to forget what we learned over the course of the 20th century is a true mystery. I hope this article helps trigger some knowledge gain.

Tyler Durden Wed, 05/27/2026 - 20:05

Kentucky Gym Exposes Female Entitlement Culture With New "Modesty Code"

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Kentucky Gym Exposes Female Entitlement Culture With New "Modesty Code"

It says a lot about modern women when a private business imposes standards of general modesty and they feel personally attacked.  So much so, that they run to social media and their local news station to cry victim.  It's not an isolated incident, it is an example of a more pervasive culture of female entitlement that is plaguing the western world.  

A Northern Kentucky gym called TAC Fitness is facing backlash after women say a new dress code policy is a violation of their right to "not be judged".  An email sent to TAC Fitness members said the gym is enforcing dress guidelines to ensure people of all ages feel comfortable and free from “inappropriate or revealing attire.”

The "modesty guidelines" are based in the gym's core philosophy:  Pursuit of excellence without vanity.  Strength without arrogance.  Influence without temptation by exposure. 

Guidelines include:  

Clothing must provide adequate coverage of the chest, back, shoulders, and thighs. Genitals, buttocks, breasts, chest, and nipples must be fully covered with opaque fabric at all times. (For skin-tight leggings: Glutes to be covered by a long tank top, t-shirt, or fabric tied around the waist.)

Shirts must fully cover the torso and chest, including cleavage.

Bottoms must fully cover the buttocks during all movements. Acceptable bottoms: Athletic shorts, pants, leggings, or sweatpants.

Tank tops and sleeveless shirts are permitted but must not be excessively low-cut.

It's unfortunate that common sense rules need to be listed for grown adults.  They do not only apply to women, but it's revealing that only women are complaining. 

The TAC gym's reaction is symbolic of a growing movement to "check" the problem of female privilege in a society that tells them they can do whatever they want wherever they want without accountability or consequences.  The notion that women should have total bodily autonomy (meaning total freedom without boundaries) is a feminist fabrication.  It's designed to exploit western values of personal liberty and push them to the extreme, while pretending as if women are "victims" if anyone tells them "No".  

In other words, if they are "free" to dress how they want, then they think they should be free to "dress how they want everywhere".  While some people (men) were not particularly bothered by this development for many decades, all that changed when feminists started accusing men of "assault" for simply looking at the goods that women were hanging out there. 

For the past decade, it's been common for female influencers to wear clothing that rides directly up their ass, and any man who is caught looking is put on blast across the internet.  Meanwhile, the same women post the content on OnlyFans for $10 per subscription.  Society has allowed this grifting to progress out of fear of being accused of "oppression", but maybe a little oppression is necessary? 

The rules were put in place by the Christian-owned business in response to some customers showing up in highly revealing clothing, bordering on nudity, and they wanted a better environment for families.  This is completely within their rights.  As the owners noted in a response to the backlash:  

"What sets TAC Fitness apart from many other gyms is our commitment to creating an environment that prioritizes safety, professionalism, and mutual respect. TAC has always been God-centered. We have never hidden that, and we will continue to carry that as our foundation. We are proud to offer an atmosphere where people of all ages and backgrounds feel welcome and comfortable. 

We believe it is possible to balance individual expression with shared community standards, and our policy reflects that commitment..."

Feminism is the vehicle which is used to enable female entitlement culture but the greater trend is largely fueled by the average woman's insatiable addiction to endless attention and validation.  At bottom, private gyms and most public spaces do not exist as venues to feed female narcissism.  A little bit of self control and modesty is not such a bad thing, and imposing such rules in most places would help to re-balance western society's spiral into radical self obsession.     

Tyler Durden Wed, 05/27/2026 - 19:40

Inside The FDA's "Cover-Up" Of Child Deaths Linked To Covid Vaccines

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Inside The FDA's "Cover-Up" Of Child Deaths Linked To Covid Vaccines

Authored by Maryanne Demasi via Brownstone Institute,

In September 2025, then-US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Commissioner Dr Marty Makary publicly acknowledged that the agency was investigating reports of child deaths following Covid-19 vaccination.

"We do know at the FDA...that there had been children who have died from the COVID vaccine," Makary said during a CNN interview.

By that stage, however, a fierce internal dispute had already emerged inside the FDA over what investigators believed the evidence showed - and whether the public should ever see the full findings.

"It really did feel like there was some sort of cover-up going on about the Covid-19 vaccines," said one individual familiar with the discussions.

MD Reports spoke with several current/former agency officials, advisers, and individuals briefed on the discussions, all of whom requested anonymity because they were not authorised to publicly discuss internal FDA deliberations.

At the centre of the controversy was an internal FDA review led by Dr Tracy Beth Høeg, a physician-scientist who was working as a senior scientist inside the FDA's vaccine division at the time.

FDA officials examined roughly 96 paediatric death reports submitted to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS), the government database used to detect potential vaccine-related adverse events.

The review included medical records, autopsy reports, pathology findings, and follow-up investigations conducted by agency staff.

About 25 deaths following Covid vaccination were ultimately considered serious enough for high-level internal discussion inside the agency.

The findings were expected to be presented at a September 2025 meeting of the CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunisation Practices (ACIP), the federal panel that shapes US vaccine recommendations.

But before that could happen, details of the review leaked to the New York Times and the Washington Post.

Høeg quickly became the focus of intense media scrutiny and criticism from vaccine advocates and unnamed FDA officials who argued she was relying too heavily on VAERS reports and overstating preliminary findings.

People familiar with the fallout said some FDA staff strongly objected to Høeg's methods and conclusions and allegedly sought to undermine her credibility by leaking details of the review.

The leak effectively ended plans for a public ACIP discussion and deepened divisions within the FDA over how the findings should be handled.

Some officials believed the findings warranted stronger warnings and greater transparency. Others feared public acknowledgement of vaccine-linked child deaths would damage confidence in the Covid vaccines.

"We know that there are these deaths that are due to the vaccine," said one source, referring to myocarditis cases and published reports from countries including Korea and Israel.

The controversy intensified after then-FDA vaccine chief Dr Vinay Prasad ordered additional investigation into the deaths identified in Høeg's review.

Months later, another leak brought the issue back into public view.

In November 2025, an internal memo circulated by Prasad became public. In it, Prasad acknowledged that "at least 10" children had died "after and because of receiving Covid-19 vaccination."

He described the findings as "a profound revelation."

"COVID-19 vaccines did result in the death of children," Prasad wrote. "Dr. Hoeg was correct in her assessment."

The memo triggered another round of backlash from media outlets and vaccine advocates, many of whom accused Prasad of overstating the evidence before the agency's analysis had been finalised.

Inside Medicine reported on a Dec 5 memo about a subsequent FDA analysis using a World Health Organization causality framework, which classified zero deaths as "certain," two as "probable/likely," and five as "possible."

But individuals involved in the discussions said pressure steadily mounted inside the agency to "downgrade" the findings with each successive review.

"It seemed like there was a lot of pressure to keep decreasing the number of deaths," said one source.

"It does seem like they tortured the data to get something that was more palatable."

At the same time, tensions were also growing around another unresolved issue inside the FDA - residual DNA contamination in Covid mRNA vaccines.

The issue surfaced repeatedly during ACIP discussions throughout 2025, with some advisory group members seeking additional information from the FDA about DNA levels and biodistribution studies involving lipid nanoparticles.

According to individuals familiar with the discussions, those requests were repeatedly delayed.

One individual identified Dr David C. Kaslow, director of the FDA's Office of Vaccines Research and Review (OVRR), as the official responsible for liaising with ACIP on the issue.

Another person involved in the discussions described Kaslow as the person "stonewalling" the issue of DNA contamination.

The controversy has since drawn Congressional scrutiny.

In May 2026, Senator Ron Johnson (R-WI) wrote to Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. referencing an FDA memorandum examining paediatric deaths following Covid vaccination.

Johnson said the documents raised concerns about a potential "cover-up" of vaccine safety risks.

The letter confirmed that FDA officials reviewed 96 paediatric deaths following vaccination and ultimately classified seven cases as either "possibly" or "probably" related to Covid vaccination.

It also acknowledged that fatal myocarditis cases represented "new safety information" and documented discussions about revised vaccine warning labels.

By then, the internal dispute at the FDA had expanded beyond the deaths themselves and into a broader fight over vaccine safety warnings.

Høeg later delivered an internal presentation arguing that Covid mRNA vaccines warranted a black box warning - the FDA's strongest warning reserved for products associated with serious injury or death.

The proposed warning would have explicitly acknowledged the risk of death in children.

"If a vaccine has potential to cause death to children, I think it should be on the label," said one source familiar with the discussions.

Høeg's proposal was ultimately rejected by the agency.

In December 2025, Makary publicly confirmed that the FDA had declined an internal recommendation for a black box warning on Covid mRNA vaccines.

Makary argued that earlier safety concerns emerged during the initial multi-dose rollout and might not apply to annual vaccination schedules.

According to individuals familiar with the discussions, Høeg's persistent probing of Covid vaccine safety issues increasingly isolated her inside the agency.

Her eventual transfer out of the vaccine division and into the FDA's drug division, CDER, effectively ended her involvement in those investigations.

Only last week, Høeg was fired from the agency after refusing to resign from her position.

To this day, the FDA has never publicly released the full paediatric death review examining 96 VAERS reports of child deaths following Covid vaccination, nor the multiple revised versions of the agency's subsequent analyses.

"Why do we collect these VAERS reports if we're not going to explain to the public what we find?" said one source.

Now, months after the internal disputes first erupted, the FDA continues to face questions about what officials knew, when they knew it, and why the agency failed to promptly release its investigations into paediatric deaths following Covid vaccination.

Tyler Durden Wed, 05/27/2026 - 19:15

US, India Sign Critical Minerals And Rare Earths Mining Pact

Zero Hedge -

US, India Sign Critical Minerals And Rare Earths Mining Pact

Authored by Jill McLaughlin via The Epoch Times,

The United States and India signed a key agreement on May 26 to secure critical minerals and rare earth mining, processing, and supplies, further loosening China's grip on the global market, during Secretary of State Marco Rubio's four-day visit.

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio (L) walks with India's Minister of External Affairs S. Jaishankar before their talks in New Delhi, India, on May 24, 2026. Julia Demaree Nikhinson, Pool/AP Photo

"We are two countries who have a strategic interest in ensuring reliable long-term access to critical minerals and supply chains that are important for our innovation economy," Rubio said during the signing. "This is a very important step."

Rubio was in India for a four-day diplomatic visit May 23-26 to shore up the United States' partnership with what he called "one of our most important strategic partners in the world."

He said the talks included a scope of issues that the United States works together on with India.

In a similar statement about the agreement, India's External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar said the framework will strengthen resilient and diversified supply chains, help both nations collaborate on financing, and also help with the effective management of critical minerals and rare earths.

"I think it's a very important initiative," Jaishankar said during the signing. "It's one more sign of how close our cooperation is and how important it is today in a world where there are so many challenges but also so many opportunities."

The framework for the agreement first began to take shape in February when India signed onto Pax Silica, a U.S.-led strategic initiative and coalition aimed at securing a global supply chain for artificial intelligence (AI) progress and economic security. India was one of 14 countries to sign the agreement.

India has one of the world's largest rare earth elements reserves, and existing processing capabilities that can be developed, according to the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), a bipartisan think tank organization. The country has rich sand deposits containing monazite, which includes thorium and other minerals. Thorium is a nuclear fuel.

China accounts for about 60 percent of global rare earth elements production and about 90 percent of processing.

On May 26, Rubio also announced signing a partnership charter and agreement on critical minerals with Armenia.

Rubio held a ceremony with Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan signing the bilateral framework agreement on the Trump Route for International Peace and Prosperity. They also signed a Strategic Partnership Charter and agreement on critical minerals.

Armenia mainly mines iron, copper, molybdenum, lead, zinc, gold, silver, antimony, and aluminum. The country also has valuable reserves of rare metals, including gold-polymetallic, copper-molybdenum, and copper pyrite deposits, according to the U.S. International Trade Administration.

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio (L) walks to shake hands with India's Minister of External Affairs S. Jaishankar after addressing a joint press conference following their talks in New Delhi, India, on May 24, 2026. Manish Swarup/AP Photo Tyler Durden Wed, 05/27/2026 - 18:25

Seattle Residents Forced To Barricade Their Streets To Protect From Gun Violence

Zero Hedge -

Seattle Residents Forced To Barricade Their Streets To Protect From Gun Violence

Fed up with years of gun violence and repeated shootings near Aurora Avenue, some residents in North Seattle have started installing their own street barricades in an effort to protect their neighborhoods, KOMO News writes

Neighbors living near North 97th, 98th, and 102nd streets recently placed large planter boxes, piles of dirt, and gravel across parts of residential roads that connect to Aurora Avenue North. The goal, residents say, is to make it harder for shooters to speed through side streets during violent incidents linked to ongoing prostitution and human trafficking activity in the area.

Tensions escalated again over the weekend after another shooting near Aurora Avenue N and N 98th Street. Seattle police said officers found around 40 shell casings at the scene after multiple people exchanged gunfire. Security footage reportedly captured several seconds of rapid shooting, with bullets hitting nearby apartments, homes, and parked cars. In one recent case, a stray bullet entered a family’s home and came to rest near the bassinet of a 6-week-old baby.

The KOMO report says that many residents say the violence has become unbearable and accuse city leaders of failing to respond effectively despite years of complaints and calls for stronger enforcement. In response to the latest incidents, Seattle police said they are increasing overnight patrols along Aurora Avenue and assigning additional resources from the department’s Gun Violence Reduction Unit.

The homemade barriers, however, have sparked disagreement within the community. Some residents worry blocked streets could slow firefighters, ambulances, or police responding to emergencies. Others point out that Seattle requires permits for any structures placed in public roadways, meaning the barricades could eventually be removed by the city.

Still, supporters argue the measures are necessary to keep residents safe, especially children and families living near the repeated violence. They say enough routes remain open for emergency vehicles and believe the immediate threat from ongoing shootings outweighs concerns about the temporary roadblocks.

Tyler Durden Wed, 05/27/2026 - 18:00

Mexico Hosts Iranian World Cup Team After Training Camp Switched From US

Zero Hedge -

Mexico Hosts Iranian World Cup Team After Training Camp Switched From US

Authored by Chris Summers via The Epoch Times,

Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said her country had agreed to host Iran’s World Cup soccer team this summer after Washington decided it did not want the players to stay in the United States overnight.

“The United States doesn’t want the Iranian national team to stay overnight in the United States,” Sheinbaum told reporters on May 25.

She said a FIFA representative had asked, “Can they stay overnight in Mexico?”

“And we said, ‘Yes, no problem. We have no issue with that,’” she said.

“We have no reason to deny them the possibility of them staying in Mexico,” Sheinbaum said, before saying the details were being sorted out by Gabriela Cuevas, the Mexican representative to FIFA, and the tourism minister, Josefina Rodríguez Zamora.

FIFA announced on May 25 that the training camps for the 48 teams had been finalized, and Iran’s base had been moved to Tijuana, which is just over the border from San Diego, California.

Since the United States started Operation Epic Fury against Iran on Feb. 28, there have been doubts about whether the Iranian team could compete in the World Cup.

Trump wrote on Truth Social On March 12 that the Iranian team is “welcome to The World Cup, but I really don’t believe it is appropriate that they be there, for their own life and safety.”

On April 23, President Donald Trump’s special envoy for global partnerships, Paolo Zampolli, suggested to FIFA President Gianni Infantino and the White House that four-time winner Italy—who failed to qualify—should replace Iran at the World Cup.

On the same day, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said that Washington had no objection to Iran taking part in the soccer World Cup in North America but that nobody with ties to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) would be allowed entry into the United States.

FIFA decided in 2018 to let the United States, Canada, and Mexico co-host the World Cup tournament.

World Cups are typically hosted by only one country, with the exception of the 2002 tournament, which was co-hosted by Japan and South Korea. But because FIFA had decided to expand the size of the tournament from 32 to 48 teams, it agreed that the 104 matches could be shared between three countries.

Iran’s 3 Games in US

Iran qualified for the World Cup in March 2025, and in December, when the draw for the tournament was made, their three group games were placed in Seattle and Los Angeles.

At the draw, Trump was awarded with the inaugural FIFA peace prize by the organization’s president, Gianni Infantino.

The teams who have all their group games in the United States have training camps there, with the exception of Iran, who was originally scheduled to be based in Tucson, Arizona.

Iran’s first game will be in Inglewood, California, against New Zealand on June 15.

Six days later, they will play at the same venue, against Belgium, and their final group game will be against Egypt in Seattle on June 26.

The World Cup runs from June 11 to July 19, and if Iran finishes in the top two in their group, they will go through to a second round match.

Players from Iran's national soccer team stand onstage as they are greeted by a crowd—before their departure for training and friendly matches in Turkey—at Islamic Revolution Square in Tehran, Iran, on May 13, 2026. Vahid Salemi/AP

If Iran finishes their group in second place, they could play the United States on July 3, in Dallas.

Iran has qualified for the World Cup six times—in 1978, 1998, 2006, 2014, 2018, and 2022—but has never progressed beyond the group stage.

The U.S. State Department said on May 25 that Trump had made it clear the Iranian team was welcome to participate in the tournament.

The Epoch Times reached out to the State Department for further comment but did not receive a response by publication time.

Tyler Durden Wed, 05/27/2026 - 17:40

China's Crackdown On Online Foreign Trades Will Increase Capital Flight

Zero Hedge -

China's Crackdown On Online Foreign Trades Will Increase Capital Flight

Authored by Anders Corr via The Epoch Times,

The regime in China imposed a crackdown against three online brokers that serve mainland Chinese clients by facilitating their foreign securities trades.

The crackdown worries the Hong Kong financial industry with the threat of harming liquidity, initial public offerings (IPOs), and cross-border capital flows in the world’s top capital market for the first quarter of 2026. An estimated $1 trillion of “hot money” seeking short-term investments in high-interest assets flowed out of China in 2025.

The firms are Tiger Brokers, Futu Holdings, and Long Bridge Securities, which together hold as much as $32 billion in assets under management for mainland clients. The May 22 crackdown by the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC), coordinated with other regime organs, is over the firms’ alleged facilitation of unregulated overseas trading, including stocks and cryptocurrencies. The regime confiscated “illegal gains” from the three firms. For two years, the mainland accounts in question are banned from making new purchases and are only allowed to sell their assets and withdraw funds.

The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) regulates international capital flows in an attempt to accumulate wealth in China and tax overseas investments. The controls apply to international transfers of foreign exchange above $50,000 per mainland Chinese per year. Regulators in Beijing are forcing the three brokers to sell many of their overseas assets, putting downward pressure on the firms’ share prices, on popular (among Chinese investors) overseas-listed Chinese companies, and on the Chinese and Hong Kong stock indexes.

The regime’s targeting of the firms seeks to force the flow of investment into official channels more easily regulated and taxed, including Hong Kong’s Stock Connect, Wealth Management Connect, and Qualified Domestic Institutional Investor (QDII) programs.

The first two only allow Hong Kong-listed securities, while QDII has quotas.

The crackdown comes approximately a year after at least some of the firms received increased interest in the Hong Kong IPOs of “star” Chinese companies and overseas transfers due in part to higher interest rates abroad.

Mainland investors are particularly interested in U.S. fixed income and equities.

Quantitative strategies, hedge funds, and gold are also popular. In response to growing demand for private wealth, brokers have increased their presence in Hong Kong, Malaysia, and Singapore.

Last June, Tiger reportedly planned to double the number of its employees in Hong Kong to target offshore Chinese wealth in the city. The company was founded twelve years ago in Beijing, but is now headquartered in Singapore. Last year, it employed 60 people in Hong Kong, where it began operations in 2022. Tiger’s assets under management were north of $50 billion, including in the United States, Australia, and New Zealand. The company’s parent firm, UP Fintech Holding, is U.S.-listed.

Tiger will likely pay about $60 million in fines and confiscated income to the regime. UP Fintech’s ADRs and Futu shares fell as much as 47 percent and 35 percent in premarket trading following news of the crackdown.

Insiders may have profited from the crackdown as buying of put options expiring on May 22 surged the day prior to the announcement to 600,000 shares of Futu alone. Gains on those shares led to paper gains of as much as 3,400 percent. This raises questions about insider risks to U.S. and other investors in public companies over which the CCP has so much control and foreknowledge.

The proposed fine for Futu is approximately $271 million, plus a personal fine of $184,000 for the company’s CEO. The Tiger CEO will likely pay about the same.

In August, Futu executives reportedly noted that high U.S. interest rates were driving client interest in fixed-income assets. The comment came in the context of reporting on the company’s growth, including through an eighth retail location in Hong Kong, as well as expansion in Malaysia and Singapore. The firm’s private wealth services are available to persons with at least $640,000 in investable assets, many of whom are considered part of China’s “new wealth” clients who often invest online. Futu is headquartered in Hong Kong but is U.S.-listed.

In 2022, the regime banned Futu and other such companies without mainland licenses from adding new mainland clients, though old clients could still trade, and some new clients could evade the controls if they had access to a Hong Kong address. Now, even pre-2022 accounts may be deemed “illegal” and banned from unregulated foreign trades.

Stricter capital controls will likely increase demand in China for capital flight even more, as investors worry that the few exit options left to them will eventually close as well.

This could increase the use of remaining avenues for wealth transfers out of China. Traders may attempt to change the identities on the brokerages to legalize and manage the risk of their Hong Kong accounts, or move their assets through a custodian transfer (without the need to sell stocks) to brokers at Bank of China’s Hong Kong branch or HSBC Holdings PLC, which may have more permissive controls on foreign trades.

Others may seek to move their assets to brokers in the United States or Singapore, including through the use of cryptocurrencies.

Bitcoin rose for at least two days after the announced crackdown.

China has banned much crypto trading and mining since 2021, but two years later, Hong Kong attempted to become an Asian crypto-trading hub through permissive legislation and regulations. The latest crackdown will not help this goal. Neither will it ease downward pressures on China’s economy.

Prior communist crackdowns against banks, online education companies, and property developers have hurt China’s economy, and this will likely be more of the same.

Tyler Durden Wed, 05/27/2026 - 17:00

Court Hands Democrats An Ugly Loss In Florida Redistricting Fight

Zero Hedge -

Court Hands Democrats An Ugly Loss In Florida Redistricting Fight

A Florida judge handed Democrats a significant setback Tuesday, ruling that Gov. Ron DeSantis’s redrawn congressional map can remain in place while three state lawsuits work their way through the courts. Leon County Circuit Judge Joshua Hawkes, a DeSantis appointee, denied a request for a preliminary injunction, keeping the Republican-friendly plan intact as Florida's 2026 election machinery shifts into gear.

The ruling falls in the middle of the ongoing redistricting war sparked by Texas’s redistricting last year. California responded with its own new maps, but overall, Republicans have seen a net gain of seats from states that have successfully redrawn their maps. Virginia’s pro-Democrat gerrymander got smacked down by the state Supreme Court for ignoring the very process mandated by the state constitution. Louisiana is now expected to turn one of its two black Democrat-held seats into a Republican pickup, and, earlier this month, Tennessee wiped out its last Democrat-controlled black-majority district.

Hawkes found that plaintiffs had not demonstrated a substantial likelihood of success on the merits, a threshold required to block the map before trial. 

In his written opinion, Hawkes characterized mapmaker Jason Poreda's use of partisan data as circumstantial evidence of intent, not the direct proof required under the law. He also noted that forcing Florida back to its 2022 map on a rushed record would be improper, particularly with primaries less than three months away and election officials already deep into preparation.

DeSantis says the significant shift in voter registration in recent years is proof that the update was necessary to better reflect the state.

"Florida got shortchanged in the 2020 Census, and we’ve been fighting for fair representation ever since," DeSantis explained to Fox News Digital last month. "Our population has since grown dramatically, and we have moved from a Democrat majority to a 1.5 million Republican advantage. Drawing maps based on race, which is reflected in our current congressional districts, is unconstitutional and should be prohibited."

DeSantis added, "Our new map for 2026 makes good on my promise to conduct mid-decade redistricting, and it more fairly represents the makeup of Florida today.”

The outlook for the Democrats does not look good.

All three lawsuits have been consolidated before Judge Hawkes, and the fight is likely to end at the Florida Supreme Court. There are seven justices on the court, six of whom DeSantis appointed. Despite the odds working against them, the plaintiffs have already filed notices of appeal and signaled they will proceed to trial.

However, even if they somehow managed to succeed, it will likely be too late to change the maps for the upcoming midterm elections in November. Hawkes himself acknowledged in his ruling that the challenge "is more geared toward the 2028 or 2030 election cycles than the 2026 election cycle."

DeSantis' map looks almost certain to hold for the 2026 cycle, and the courts he would face on appeal are largely courts he helped build. 

 

Tyler Durden Wed, 05/27/2026 - 16:40

Why Is Consumer Sentiment At Record Lows?

Zero Hedge -

Why Is Consumer Sentiment At Record Lows?

Authored by Charles Hugh Smith via substack,

Consumer sentiment is at record lows because there is zero visibility on any real-world trends that would be positive for the bottom 90%. Vague promises of super-abundance are not visibility.

Why is consumer sentiment at record lows while the stock market is at record highs? The media / social media are ablaze with coverage and commentary on this K-shaped economy, for example: The Stock Market Has Never Been So Good When People Have Felt So BadStocks are partying like it’s 1999. Americans haven’t been this gloomy in 70 years. (wsj.com)

While much commentary focuses on the rising cost of living (i.e. inflation) and the potential disruption of jobs by AI, these miss the larger dynamic of visibility, i.e. what is visible looking forward. If the horizon is clouded by uncertainty and unaffordability, then the core investments in the future--a family home and a family--are no longer in reach except for the lucky few inheriting wealth while they’re young. A high-paying job that isn’t secure is not a foundation, it’s a temporary raft in a tempestuous sea.

Why So Few Babies? We Might Have Overlooked the Biggest Reason of All.

What unites these disparate cultures, policy environments and demographics, researchers are now realizing, is young people’s inescapable and crushing sense that the future is too uncertain for the lifelong commitment of parenthood.

The future has never been assured, but it feels as though we are living in a time of spectacular uncertainty. The Gen X writer Astra Taylor calls ours “the age of insecurity”; the Gen Z writer Kyla Scanlon has described “the end of predictable progress.” Gen Z-ers’ uncertainty about the future can’t be captured by the usual metrics or entered neatly into a spreadsheet. But it may be the X factor in the global parenting free fall.

Raising children is an inherently forward-looking project, and in Professor Vignoli’s analysis, increasing exposure to a volatile global economy and accelerating technological change make it hard for young people to project a path forward with even a modest degree of confidence.

In previous lows in consumer sentiment, current economic conditions were unfavorable because the economy was in a recession. I’ve indicated the three major recessions of the past 50 years on the chart below: 1973-74 (energy crisis / inflation), 1980-82 (inflation, higher interest rates), and 2008-09 (housing bubble burst, subprime mortgage meltdown triggers Global Financial Crisis).

The most important difference between then (1973-2009) and now is that average households could still afford to buy a house and have a family and now those are out of reach for a significant percentage of median-income urban households. In previous recessions, consumers suffering the effects of recession had visibility on evidence that once the economy improved, they would still be able to afford to buy a house and raise a family. This visibility wasn’t a top-down narrative bolstered by gamed statistics; it was visible across the entire spectrum of the economy.

The truth few dare to recognize is there is no credible evidence that housing and having a family will return to being affordable for the majority in the foreseeable future. If these are what matters, then rising GDP (a favorite metric of those promoting the narrative that rising GDP means everything’s getting better for everyone) offers no visibility on what matters to households.

Also unsaid because it undermines the narratives of permanent Progress and the system benefits us all is the visible decline of the quality of everyday life. Life is more hectic, more precarious, less secure, and our health is declining in ways that go unrecognized because that undermines the narratives propping up the status quo.

It’s not just the cost of living is rising; the quality of life is deteriorating in ways that are not easily measurable. Healthcare claims being denied, busy-work being offloaded by Corporate America onto the household, the steady decline in quality of goods and services--in all these cases, what was once reliable and of good quality has been degraded. To contact customer service is now a nightmarish experience of being returned to the same menu of options, none of which address the problem you’re trying to resolve.

This Is Why You’re Drowning in Busywork 

We have been told that AI will take people’s jobs. What no one mentions is that many of those jobs are landing on us. The AI revolution involves a huge transfer of labor--not from worker to machine but from worker to consumer.

Consumers have visibility on this degradation of the quality of everyday life, and they see no plausible evidence it’s reversing. The trajectory of the future is more degradation, and there is no evidence AI will reverse this trajectory. Rather, in many ways it’s accelerating it.

There is a lively debate about whether AI will in aggregate create jobs or eliminate jobs, or generate churn that leaves the total number of jobs about the same. At this early stage, there is no visibility on how this will play out, but consumers have visibility on the potential for job losses, reductions of benefits, the collapse of job security and the possibility that most of the replacement jobs being created will be low pay and insecure.

Households have no visibility on the promise that AI will generate vast prosperity that they will share, but they have clear visibility on AI decimating stable employment. Pundits offer up the historical record that previous Industrial Revolutions laid waste to social and economic security but eventually created more general prosperity.

Households understand that this sounds nice while supporting the status quo inequality, but there is no guarantee in history; it’s not gravity, it’s contingent. This Industrial Revolution might just decimate social and economic structures and leave a dystopia in its wake that institutionalizes extreme inequality not just in wealth and outcomes but in opportunity and freedom of movement.

What’s visible is not warm and fuzzy, and insisting that consumers / households have it wrong because those set to reap extraordinary profits insist it wll all work out just fine is comically disconnected from reality. There is no visibility on all those promises of super-abundance that’s going to lift all boats, and no visibility on society surviving the onslaught of Big Tech AI.

The social order that underpins the economy has already been already discounted to near-zero by the technocratic value system and machinery of Big Tech’s optimization to increase profitability by any means available, and the resulting decay of the quality of life and the moral foundations of a functional society.

Why is consumer sentiment at record lows while the stock market is at new highs? Ask what’s visible. What’s visible is soaring corporate profits and stock indices only benefit the top 10% who own the lion’s share of stocks. What’s visible is the decline in security, affordability, the purchasing power of wages and the quality of life, and the absence of any evidence that this trajectory downward is about to reverse.

What’s visible is billionaires reaping outlandish gains from financializing technology promising that their gains will trickle down to the bottom 90% after the foundations of the bottom 90%’s security are gutted and reworked in some unforeseeable way that will magically make everyone rich.

This isn’t visibility; it’s FantasyLand. What’s visible is the decay and decline of security, employment, opportunity and visibility itself, and the emergence of a neofeudal society that is so corrupt that it no longer has the ability to recognize its own moral decay.

We inhabit a Tower of Babel that’s automating its own demise. We all have visibility on this, but to admit this is to admit the entire status quo is set on self-destruct while indulging in self-glorifying fantasies.

Consumer sentiment is at record lows because there is zero visibility on any real-world trends that would be positive for the bottom 90%. Vague promises of super-abundance are not visibility.

Here is the May 2026 snapshot of consumer sentiment:

This is a 10-year chart of consumer sentiment:

What do we have visibility on? 

How about the widening gulf between the wealthy and powerful and everyone else?

Tyler Durden Wed, 05/27/2026 - 16:20

Biden DHS Released Nearly 90% Of Border Migrants Through Parole Program

Zero Hedge -

Biden DHS Released Nearly 90% Of Border Migrants Through Parole Program

Via American Greatness,

A new report from the Government Accountability Office found that the Biden administration released nearly 90 percent of migrants encountered at the southern border through parole authority at the height of its catch-and-release policies.

The report details how the Department of Homeland Security under former President Joe Biden and then-DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas dramatically expanded the use of “humanitarian parole” between early 2021 and Jan. 20, 2025.

According to the GAO, parole authority had previously been used sparingly by presidential administrations before Biden took office.

“Specifically, our analysis showed that OFO and Border Patrol granted relatively few paroles during fiscal years 2019 and 2020,” the report stated.

The watchdog agency found that during 2019 and 2020, parole was granted in roughly 3 percent to 28 percent of southwest border encounters. That changed sharply beginning in the summer of 2021.

“The number of paroles granted increased beginning in the summer of 2021 and peaked in December 2022, when 89 percent of encounters resulted in parole,” the report stated.

“Paroles granted declined substantially after December 2022 and again after January 2025.”

The report also raised concerns that the Biden administration’s mass parole program overwhelmed federal immigration enforcement systems and left authorities struggling to track migrants released into the country.

“… without readily accessible information about noncitizens’ parole status, ICE does not have the information it needs to identify and monitor these noncitizens, or to take enforcement action, as appropriate,” the report stated.

Conservatives have argued throughout Biden’s presidency that the administration effectively dismantled immigration enforcement at the southern border by relying heavily on parole authority to release migrants into the interior of the United States.

Some architects of those immigration policies are now pushing Democrats to restore similar programs if the party regains power in Washington.

Tyler Durden Wed, 05/27/2026 - 15:40

Al 'Mr.Impeachment' Green Out As Crypto-Backed Candidates Win Key Texas Primary Runoffs

Zero Hedge -

Al 'Mr.Impeachment' Green Out As Crypto-Backed Candidates Win Key Texas Primary Runoffs

Authored by Christina Comben via CoinTelegraph.com,

Crypto-backed political groups supported several winning candidates in Texas primary runoffs Tuesday, highlighting the digital asset industry’s growing role in US elections as Congress debates new rules for crypto markets.

Attorney General Ken Paxton won the Republican US Senate runoff against four-term Senator John Cornyn by a wide margin, according to Texas primary runoff results, and will face Democratic state Representative James Talarico in November.

In Houston’s 18th Congressional District, Democrat Christian Menefee unseated fellow Democrat representative Al Green in a decisive win after Republican-led redistricting forced the two incumbents into the same district, ousting one of the state’s most senior House members.

Democrats and Republicans Alex Mealer and Jon Bonck also secured their party’s nominations in competitive Houston-area House races.

The contests drew heavy spending from crypto-aligned political action committees (PACs) focused on a small number of high-stakes races, and come as Congress debates new rules for digital asset markets, including legislation to define crypto market structure and establish a framework for dollar‑pegged stablecoins.

Victories by candidates backed by crypto-focused PACs in a politically influential state could give the industry additional allies as those measures advance.

Crypto money reshapes key Texas races

Two races in particular show how that money is being deployed.

Protect Progress, an affiliate of the Fairshake super PAC backed by firms including Ripple and Coinbase, reported spending about $5 million to support Menefee and a further $2.8 million on advertising opposing Green in the Houston race.

Another crypto-focused group, Fellowship PAC, funded in part by financial firm Cantor Fitzgerald and crypto custodian Anchorage Digital, reported roughly $500,000 in spending to boost Paxton over Cornyn in the Senate runoff.

Fairshake’s Republican affiliate, Defend American Jobs, also backed four winning Republican candidates, Jon Bonck, Tom Sell, Carlos De La Cruz and Alex Mealer.

Texas runoffs test crypto’s political power

Bitcoin-focused policy advocate Dennis Porter commented on Menefee’s victory, saying, “A pro crypto Democrat just ousted a 20-year incumbent Democrat who was anti crypto. Nature is healing,” a nod to what many in the industry saw as years of Democratic-led “Operation Choke Point 2.0,” campaigns, in which bank regulators and enforcement agencies have been accused of squeezing crypto firms out of the financial system.

While much of crypto PACs' recent spending in the state has gone to Republican candidates, Menefee’s win gives the groups a high-profile Democratic ally in Texas.

The crypto advocacy group, Stand With Crypto, assigned Green an F grade for his strong opposition to industry-backed legislation, while Menefee is rated as supportive of digital asset innovation.

Stand With Crypto assigned Al Green an "F" rating. Source: Stand With Crypto

Prediction markets had strongly favored the crypto-aligned challengers heading into election day.

Contracts on regulated and crypto-native platforms implied odds of over 90% that both Paxton and Menefee would prevail, with nearly $15 million reportedly traded on markets tied specifically to the Paxton vs Cornyn runoff.

Tyler Durden Wed, 05/27/2026 - 15:00

Russian Fuel Tanker Aborts Cuba Delivery After Drifting In Caribbean For A Month

Zero Hedge -

Russian Fuel Tanker Aborts Cuba Delivery After Drifting In Caribbean For A Month

A Russian tanker carrying 270,000 barrels of diesel fuel and which is under US and EU sanctions spent weeks trying to reach crisis-hit Cuba, which is also under US sanctions as well amid what's essentially become a full energy blockade, but has failed the reach the island nation and turned southward toward Brazil.

The exiled Russian outlet, The Insider, has detailed the following based on maritime tracking data:

The Russian-flagged tanker Universal (IMO: 9384306), which had been drifting for almost a month in the Sargasso Sea approaching the Antilles, has finally moved. However, the vessel is heading south, not toward Cuba, according to data from the Starboard Maritime Intelligence ship tracking service provided to The Insider. The vessel's current destination is listed as FOR ORDER. Judging by the vessel's movements, the United States has denied the tanker permission to transit Cuba. (machine translation)

via The Insider

It had been bound for Cuba since its departure from Russia in April, and was for a month drifting in an area some 1,000 miles northeast of Cuba.

Its destination remains listed as "For order" - which means it is still in a holding pattern awaiting routing and final destination instructions.

According to more details of it prior movements via The Moscow Times, "The Universal departed from the Russian Baltic port of Vistino in the Leningrad region on April 6 and, according to Britain's The Telegraph, was escorted through the English Channel by a Russian military convoy."

It was the Russian Black Sea Fleet frigate Admiral Grigorovich that accompanied the vessel into the Atlantic. Such extreme measures as a full military escort are deemed necessary due to prior EU country interdictions of sanctioned Russian ships.

Especially going back to April, Cuba and its population have been facing tightening economic strains where rolling blackouts and fuel shortages have intensified public hardship.

This energy crisis has become a central issue in its relations with Washington, as the government seeks relief from sanctions that limit access to fuel imports. A main supplier, Venezuela, has curtailed oil shipments to Cuba since the United States captured dictator Nicolás Maduro in January.

The White House has repeatedly proclaimed that the Cuban government is in a weakened state. President Trump has also threatened "Cuba is next". "The country is very weak. They’re in a very weak position economically, obviously, and financially," WH Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said back in April.

Tyler Durden Wed, 05/27/2026 - 14:40

UFO-Linked Air Force General Met Shadowy Pentagon Unit Hours Before Vanishing

Zero Hedge -

UFO-Linked Air Force General Met Shadowy Pentagon Unit Hours Before Vanishing

Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity.news,

New bodycam footage shows retired Maj. Gen. William Neil McCasland had a dinner meeting with US Space Force members the night before his unexplained disappearance, deepening concerns over experts tied to sensitive programs.

McCasland, central to advanced aerospace and nuclear research, walked out of his Albuquerque home on February 27, 2026, leaving behind his phone, prescription glasses, and wearable tracking devices. He took his wallet, a .38-caliber revolver with holster, and a red backpack. Despite extensive searches in the rugged Sandia Mountains foothills with FBI assistance, no trace has been found, and a Silver Alert remains active.

The newly surfaced video obtained by the Law&Crime Network captures officers interviewing a witness who dined with McCasland the night prior. The woman, connected through the Kirtland Partnership nonprofit, described a dinner meeting involving McCasland and US Space Force members around 6pm in Albuquerque.

She told authorities: "I was shocked this morning when I saw the alert because what I noticed Thursday evening [February 26] is he wasn't his usual self. He was kind of spacey and quiet and you know that that happens with people."

McCasland's wife, Susan McCasland Wilkerson, appeared in the footage and revealed he had been prescribed new medication the night before for sleep issues, unexplained weight loss of about 20 pounds, and anxiety.

She stated: "Today he had taken a drug that the doctor prescribed last night that was supposed to help him sleep with weight gain... He's lost about 20 pounds for no reason and with anxiety. Today he woke up and said, 'Well, I have got better sleep, but it's like the after effects of a bad hangover. I just kind of feel a little weird.'"

The witness further claimed McCasland remained deeply involved despite retirement: "He was the head of Air Force Research Lab to the point the man's names are in the UFO documents that are fixed to be released... He's in that depth, so he has a very high security clearance."

This meeting with Space Force personnel, tasked with tracking unexplained aerial phenomena for national security, occurred against the backdrop of Trump's disclosure order. The timing fuels skepticism toward any narrative minimizing potential connections.

McCasland commanded Kirtland Air Force Base in New Mexico - a hub for nuclear weapons research and Space Force operations - and the Air Force Research Laboratory at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio. Wright-Patterson has long carried UFO associations, including unconfirmed claims of housing Roswell crash materials.

Tennessee Congressman Tim Burchett described him pointedly: "He's the guy that had a lot of nuclear secrets. I've been told by several sources that he was the gatekeeper for the UFO stuff."

His wife has downplayed direct UFO involvement, noting only a brief unpaid consulting role with Tom DeLonge's To The Stars Academy for fictional projects, stating he "does not have any special knowledge" on extraterrestrial matters. Yet the pre-disappearance meeting and documented clearances keep legitimate questions alive.

This development fits into a disturbing sequence of disappearances and deaths.

These reports detail repeated losses among personnel with overlapping expertise in NASA projects, nuclear propulsion, aerospace engineering, JPL rocket technology, and potential UFO-related programs.

From a NASA scientist found charred in a Tesla crash to an aerospace engineer and family killed in a plane incident, the cases accumulated, pushing reported totals toward 11 or more. Speculation around JPL disappearances and experts tied to "dark project secrets" added layers, highlighting vulnerabilities in highly specialized fields.

The pattern emerged alongside Trump's push for openness, with file releases aiming to counter secrecy that has long shielded sensitive programs from scrutiny. While coincidence remains possible, the concentration among those familiar with advanced propulsion, space intelligence, and unidentified phenomena demands transparent investigation.

President Trump addressed the string of incidents directly in exchanges with reporters. He stated: "Well, so far, I mean, they're individual. We have a lot of scientists... Some were sick. Some left this earth self-inflicted. Some had other things. So far we're finding that there's not much of a connection."

The incidents cluster around key sites: Wright-Patterson's National Space Intelligence Center, Kirtland's nuclear and Space Force activities, and JPL's propulsion work. Space Force's UAP monitoring mandate adds relevance. Losses of experienced personnel weaken continuity precisely when disclosure efforts intensify.

Excessive classification has historically created vulnerabilities - to leaks, foreign intelligence, or internal pressures. Trump's releases counter that by promoting oversight. Yet personnel protection is equally vital. Even absent a proven conspiracy, the pattern exposes gaps during rapid advancement in aerospace and intelligence programs.

Many are convinced that there is a 'deep state' effort to battle against Trump's move toward disclosure.

Historical context around Wright-Patterson includes longstanding claims from researchers like Hal Puthoff and Eric Davis on advanced materials. McCasland's leadership there made him a potential knowledge bridge. Similar questions apply to other cases, and public distrust grows when mainstream coverage dismisses them prematurely.

Broader questions persist on safeguarding talent. With hundreds of thousands of scientists in government and defense, isolated tragedies occur, yet clusters in niche classified fields invite scrutiny. Full reports promised by the administration could clarify, but delays risk further erosion of trust as McCasland remains missing.

Tyler Durden Wed, 05/27/2026 - 13:40

Solid 5Y Auction Despite 12th Consecutive Tail, Thanks To Stellar Foreign Demand

Zero Hedge -

Solid 5Y Auction Despite 12th Consecutive Tail, Thanks To Stellar Foreign Demand

After a mediocre 2Y auction on Tuesday, moments ago the Treasury sold the week's second coupon auction when it auctioned off $70BN in 5Y paper to solid demand, some superficial weakness notwithstanding. 

The auction stopped at a high yield of 4.182%, up from 3.955% in April and the highest yield since Jan 2025. The auction also tailed the 4.181% When Issued by 0.1bp, which was the 12th consecutive tailing auction for the tenor, the longest stretch on record.

The bid to cover was 2.34, up from 2.33 last month, and right on top of the 6-auction average 2 339. What is notable here is just how much the BTC has flatlined in the past 3 years.

The internals were also solid with Indirects awarded 74.85%, the highest since May 2025 and one of the highest on record. And with Directs awarded 12.34%, the lowest since March 2025, Dealers were left with 12.8% of the auction, up fractionally from 12.7% in April and above the recent average of 12.0%.

Overall, this was a solid auction with impressive foreign demand, where the only blemish was the tiny tail, which however one can ignore considering the impressive foreign bid.

Tyler Durden Wed, 05/27/2026 - 13:21

Tulsi Gabbard To Go Nuclear On Deep State Before Leaving ODNI

Zero Hedge -

Tulsi Gabbard To Go Nuclear On Deep State Before Leaving ODNI

Last week, Tulsi Gabbard, President Trump's Director of National Intelligence, announced she will step down on June 30 to care for her husband, Abraham, who has been diagnosed with what she called "an extremely rare form of bone cancer." 

"My husband, Abraham, has recently been diagnosed with an extremely rare form of bone cancer. He faces major challenges in the coming weeks and months. At this time, I must step away from public service to be by his side and fully support him through this battle," she wrote in her resignation letter.

"I cannot in good conscience ask him to face this fight alone while I continue in this demanding and time-consuming position." 

Since taking the position of DNI, Gabbard has moved aggressively to overhaul the intelligence community, trying to root out the politicization and corruption, including exposing the deep state’s war on President Trump. 

Gabbard revoked the security clearances of officials found to have "abused public trust," shut down DEI programs across the intelligence community, and redirected its focus toward foreign terrorist organizations.

Gabbard also prioritized transparency, and by May 2026, Gabbard had overseen the declassification of more than 500,000 pages of previously secret government documents.

Those documents span an almost surreal range of American history: assassination records on President John F. Kennedy, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, and Martin Luther King Jr.; files connected to Amelia Earhart's 1937 disappearance; and Biden administration documents detailing the federal government's "Strategic Implementation Plan for Countering Domestic Terrorism."

She also pushed the declassification of materials she argues expose the full mechanics of the Russia investigation, which her office says proved that the Obama administration weaponized intelligence to undermine Trump's 2016 campaign.

She may be leaving, but between now and her final day as DNI, Gabbard intends to make her departure felt by the deep state. 

Gabbard plans to release findings from a string of sensitive investigations in weekly installments.

These revelations will include declassifications covering the Havana Syndrome, the origins of COVID-19, the alleged weaponization of the federal government under recent Democrat administrations, and the 2020 presidential election. 

In her resignation letter to Trump, Gabbard pledged to stay focused on the mission.

"I am fully committed to ensuring a smooth and thorough transition over the coming weeks so that you and your team experience no disruption in leadership or momentum," she wrote.

"It has been a profound honor to serve the American people as DNI."

Trump responded to Gabbard’s resignation on Truth Social. 

"Unfortunately, after having done a great job, Tulsi Gabbard will be leaving the Administration on June 30th," he wrote, noting Abraham's diagnosis.

He added, "I have no doubt he will soon be better than ever.”

He praised Gabbard’s tenure, saying she has "done an incredible job, and we will miss her." 

Principal Deputy Director of National Intelligence Aaron Lukas will serve as Acting DNI.

However, the Trump administration now faces a real procedural challenge in confirming a permanent replacement. Tensions between the White House and Senate Republicans have been running hot in the wake of Trump's endorsements of primary challengers against Sen. John Cornyn of Texas and Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana. 

With one month left in office, Gabbard has made her intentions clear. The secrets that the deep state hoped wouldn’t see the light of day will all be coming out before she walks out the door. 

Tyler Durden Wed, 05/27/2026 - 13:20

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