CACTUS View of the Iran War

Introduction

In my last essay I explained there are 4 primary lenses through which to view our overshoot predicament. I argued that the CACTUS lens (Complexity Accelerated Collapse of a Thermodynamically Unsustainable System) provides the clearest view of what to expect and what we should do.

Unfortunately, what US leaders have decided to do in Iran is the opposite of what CACTUS prescribes, which means we should expect the time to collapse to be shorter now than it was a week ago.

Explanations given by US leaders for why they attacked Iran have been muddled, fluid, and unconvincing. They include:

  • nuclear weapons need to be obliterated again
  • conventional missiles threaten nuclear armed Israel
  • Iran supports people defending their own land (aka terrorists)
  • protecting protesters harmed by the US attack on Iran’s currency
  • regime change
  • pre-empting an attack on US

Counter explanations from justifiably skeptical journalists and analysts are also varied including:

  • Israel influence on US politics to achieve regional power goals
  • Epstein distraction
  • Evangelical Christians believe middle east conflict required for Jesus to return
  • hatred of Muslims and/or Arabs
  • revenge for American embassy hostages
  • Iranian theocratic regime is evil and not supported by most citizens

Each of these explanations no doubt motivates different groups, however none of them are the reason the US attacked Iran.

In this essay I explain the real reason US leaders attacked Iran, why they are lying to us, and why, as CACTUS explains, the US has made things worse for all countries, including themselves.

My explanation does not require US leaders to have extraordinary awareness or intelligence, nor to have rare defective denial genes, and I assume US leaders are mostly good people trying to do the right thing for their citizens, which increases the probability that I am correct.

Risks

The risks US leaders have taken by starting a war with Iran are extraordinarily high. I think they know this. Therefore, their reason for attacking Iran must be existential.

Iran is a much tougher adversary than other countries the US has fought like Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, and Venezuela. Iran is a large technologically advanced country with 90 million people fiercely proud of their independence. Their geography is mountainous and challenging to attack. They have expected an attack from the US and have been preparing for a long time. Many Iranians are willing to die to defend their independence.

The global economy is fragile because the system requires growth to not collapse, limits have slowed growth, the debt we have used to force growth has grown to dangerous levels, and limits to growth are becoming stronger.

In response to being attacked by a much more powerful country, Iran is responding asymmetrically by harming the economies of the US and its allies.

The most significant thing Iran has done so far is to close the Strait of Hormuz through which 20% of global oil produced, and 40% of global oil imported, flows.

Also important, Iran has attacked Qatar forcing it to stop producing 20% of the world’s LNG, and significant quantities of fertilizer and other important materials.

CACTUS explains that a modest persistent degrowth of the economy is sufficient to trigger a cascading collapse of complexity and modernity.

The size of the economy is roughly proportional to oil consumption.  Closing the Strait of Hormuz for a period longer than importing countries have oil reserves would roughly reduce global GDP by 20%, which is more than sufficient to trigger an unrecoverable collapse, if Hormuz remains closed long enough.

It’s unlikely anyone accurately knows how long the strait can remain closed without triggering a collapse, however most countries on average have about 90 days of oil in storage, and so 120 days of closure is a reasonable guess.

Note that China is an exception and seems to have anticipated the US attack on Iran by stockpiling about 120 days of oil reserves.

Given that other critical materials like fertilizer, petrochemicals, aluminum, and food to feed middle east countries pass through the strait, and the extreme complexity of global supply chains, and the fragility of our financial bubbles, and the likelihood that some importing countries will not have 90 days of oil and LNG buffers, it is reasonable to assume 120 days is a best case and serious problems will begin before that.

We don’t know for how long Iran wants, or is able, to keep the strait closed. We don’t know if the US can force the strait to reopen, or how long it might take to repair any damage and return to normal operations.

We do know that cumulative damage is being done to the global economy every day the strait remains closed, and the risk of a collapse increases with time.

The US attack on Iran has other significant risks.

Projecting advanced military force a long way from home is expensive and difficult to sustain. Doubly so given recent US support for Ukraine, and the fact the US does not have the industrial capacity it once had.

This means there is a reasonable chance Iran can win simply by surviving and outlasting the US.

A US loss to Iran would be catastrophic for obvious geopolitical reasons. It’s hard to imagine the US would not escalate to nuclear weapons if faced with a loss, and even less hard to imagine if Israel felt its survival was at stake. A nuclear attack on Iran would create a significant risk of nuclear escalation from its allies China and Russia.

Lastly, there are many complex rivalries, hatreds, and interests among middle east countries, and the countries that depend on their oil. Escalation of the Iran war in unpredictable and uncontrollable directions is probable. We can see escalation is already starting.

In summary, by attacking Iran, the US has created extreme risks.

What could be worth these risks?

Certainly not the reasons given by US leaders.

Nor the alternative reasons given by observers.

US Motivation

US power today depends on a strong military, owning the world’s reserve currency, and having access to sufficient energy and materials.

The standard of living for US citizens, and the jobs of most US leaders, depend on sustaining US power.

The industrial capacity of China already far exceeds the US.  

The US military is stronger than the Chinese military, however China is using its superior industrial capacity to catch up.

Last month China announced it now intends to compete with the US for “global reserve currency status” and to become a “financial powerhouse”.

To retain its power, the US must defend its reserve currency, and to do so needs the world’s strongest military.

US military strength is dependent on many rare earth minerals, and China controls almost all of them.

Last year China demonstrated its willingness to withhold rare earth minerals exports in retaliation against US tariffs, and is now blocking many exports destined for US military applications.

The US is working to create alternate sources of rare earth minerals, but this is an expensive decade-ish project. Those of us with CACTUS awareness understand this plan for US self-sufficiency may never succeed.

Access to rare earth minerals is therefore an existential issue for the US.

China is the only source of rare earth minerals in the short term and the US needs leverage to force China to provide them.

China is the world’s largest importer of oil at about 12 million barrels a day.

Roughly half of this oil comes from countries the US controls like Saudi Arabia and Iraq. The other half comes from countries the US does not control like Russia and Iran.

The US attempted to get control of Russian oil via the Ukraine war, but that plan failed.

China imports 90% of Iran’s oil, which is about 1.5 million barrels a day, and pays with Chinese Renminbi.

Iran’s oil represents about 13% of China’s oil imports, and while not huge, is strategically important because the US does not control Iran, and because Iran accepts Renminbi as payment, and because China receives a price discount for being Iran’s largest and most reliable customer, and because depletion is making it difficult to find alternate sources of oil.

The reason the US accepted the extreme risks of attacking Iran is now clear.

To retain its military power and reserve currency the US needs leverage to force China to provide it with rare earth minerals, and the US intends to use Iran’s oil as that leverage.

The US aggression has been extreme, including killing 160 young schoolgirls without an apology, suggesting there is an urgency behind the US strategy.

The urgency comes from the dependence of stocks on flows. The US military has a reasonable stock of weapons, but they are being depleted faster than they are being replaced due to the demands of Ukraine, the complexity of US weapons, and the hollowing out of US industrial capacity. In addition, some weapons cannot be replaced until the rare earth minerals problem is solved.

So, the US has decided to go all in with the goal of pounding Iran into quick submission. As stated earlier, this creates a serious risk of nuclear escalation if Iran proves to be tough enough to take the beating and not submit.

Conclusion

Those of us that are overshoot aware and see through the Debt, Energy, Ecology, or CACTUS lenses know that we are facing limits to growth, and big changes are on the horizon.

We know there are much bigger forces in play beneath the surface of the rare earth minerals for oil story.

There are no doubt people in the US government whose job it is to understand the threats of non-renewable energy and mineral depletion, but I expect most US leaders are like 99.9% of all people and aggressively deny these threats exist.

The point is that a coherent story to explain the US attack on Iran does not require overshoot awareness, or even a deep understand of energy.

US leaders are just normal ignorant people in denial trying to do the best they can for their citizens.

The reason US leaders are lying to us about why they attacked Iran is now clear.

US leaders can’t possibly say that if China does not provide rare earth minerals the US military will be weak, and the US will lose reserve currency status, and the standard of living for Americans will fall 50+%, so we have to kill thousands of Iranians, and spend billions of dollars, and risk World War III, and risk collapsing the global economy, to force China to give them to us.

Notice that none of the 6 reasons US leaders have provided for attacking Iran, nor the 6 reasons pundits have provided, that I listed above, are even close to the real reason.

In addition, I follow closely about 20 geopolitical analysts, plus maybe another 20 less closely, all of which I trust have sufficient integrity to at least attempt to accurately report WHAT is going on, however none of these 40 people are even close to accurately explaining WHY the US attacked Iran.

None, not even close! How is this possible?

Notice that all 12 incorrect explanations have one thing in common. They all avoid discussing limits to growth, or non-renewable resource depletion, or scarcity, or bubbles, or living beyond our means.

Anything associated with overshoot is taboo because it is a too unpleasant reality for our brains to accept as explained by the MORT theory.

We are a uniquely smart species capable of understanding many complex topics, unless the topic is really unpleasant.

It’s an amazing phenomenon to observe and is why I started un-Denial.

As a final point I want to repeat a point I made in my last essay.

There is a significant cost to the fact that most leaders do not understand CACTUS. The attack on Iran, even in the best case of the war ending quickly, has done serious damage to the global economy. We are in the end stage of an advanced civilization, and damage does not heal well now. There are too many demands for maintenance and repair, and we don’t have the material wealth to address them all.

Every time we recklessly break something, as the US just did by attacking Iran, we reduce the time to collapse.

A wise species would find a way to spread awareness of CACTUS so that we can extend the time to collapse and use some of our remaining resources to improve the quality of life for the survivors and other species.

Achieving awareness is a challenge because even if CACTUS was explained to our leaders with compelling evidence, most would still deny CACTUS due to the human genetic tendency to deny unpleasant realities as explained by Dr. Ajit Varki’s MORT theory.

I proposed one promising idea for spreading CACTUS awareness in my last essay. Hopefully others reading this will come up with other ideas.

P.S. We now understand why good people like Tulsi Gabbard who campaigned against the war have been silent, and why Trump flip-flopped on war promises.

P.P.S. We now also understand why the US decapitated Venezuela.

In 2025 China imported about 600K barrels per day, representing 80% of Venezuela’s exported oil, in exchange for Renminbi or barter repayment of debt.

After the US kidnapped Venezuela’s president in January 2026, oil exported to China fell to 50K barrels per day or less.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

261 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Hamish
Hamish
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 10, 2026 12:21 am

“I wish there was a way I could communicate with Brian … ”

Did you try his email :
cartalucci [_at_] gmail [_dot_] com

Florian
Florian
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 10, 2026 1:39 am

Brian Berletic reminds us that by initiating a war of aggression the US has (maybe intentionally) closed the Strait of Hormuz cutting off China from (about 25%) of its oil and the clock is now ticking on China’s 100 days of reserves.

Iran explicitly said that only US and Israeli ships can’t pass. They deny that they closed the strait but rather control it and Chinese ships already passed it. Even a Suezmax as far as I know.

Capscacin
Capscacin
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 10, 2026 2:23 am

Maybe china gets some sort of energy independence? As in, not nearly enough to continue as it is now but not 0 either

Perran
Perran
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 10, 2026 2:59 pm

My bet. Denial and no reply

paqnation
March 9, 2026 8:57 pm

Charles Eisenstein putting on a master clinic of how to channel your denial so that you remain a clueless fucking moron.

For the record, I wasn’t seeking out this low hanging fruit. It popped up in my algorithm.

So as we navigate these times, let us please remain in touch with that deep intuitive sense that this is crazy. Come on people! Can’t we be done with this drama of war?

The answer to that question is yes, we can. This is not the eternal human condition. Our consciousness is changing. And let us declare that this is the last time that we will allow this to happen.

Yeah, I hear the cynical part of you that says war will always be with us. I hear it in me. But that resignation doesn’t feel good. And it doesn’t feel true.

So right now I’m inviting everybody to disregard the cynicism and touch that part of yourself that knows a more beautiful world is possible. That lasting true peace on earth is possible.

The Iran War: It is the Gods Who Weep – Sanity Project 2026

monk
Reply to  paqnation
March 9, 2026 9:36 pm

He is so annoying! Also what is your algorithm up to?

paqnation
Reply to  monk
March 9, 2026 9:44 pm

LOL, I’m proud to say that I’ve got my algorithm so confused. One minute it sends me nihilistic content, next minute I get religious “joy to the world” content.

Renaee
Reply to  paqnation
March 9, 2026 11:02 pm

They are two sides of the same coin…

Felix
Felix
Reply to  paqnation
March 9, 2026 10:25 pm

“as long as there are men, there will be wars”- Albert Einstein

Stellarwind72
March 9, 2026 7:53 pm

Due to the coming fertilizer shortages, we will soon discover how dependent we are on “phantom carrying capacity”
https://www.resilience.org/stories/2005-03-06/dependence-phantom-carrying-capacity/

Renaee
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 9, 2026 3:35 pm

Today Australia announces we will send military assistance to middle east.

115k Australians living in those countries, 24k in UAE. apparently we are not interested in taking ‘offensive action’ just to help those nations defend themselves against what are ‘unprovoked attacks’ – unbelieable it can be worded like this. They don’t even have the honesty to say we are trying to protect oil assetts, it’s all about ‘keeping Australians safe’.

More Australian MPs telling people not to panic in clip below. The conservative Lib/Nationals MPs are the ones sounding the alarm, while Labour govt trying to reassure everyone there are ample reserves and everthing has arrived as expected and on time. Surely they are looking ahead and discussing rationing behind closed doors? How could they not be??

Edit – the news clip did not display. This is link

Last edited 25 days ago by Renaee
paqnation
Reply to  Renaee
March 9, 2026 5:26 pm

Thanks. Keep the entertainment coming.

And remember… this is our payoff for being doomers. We get to watch the world go insane with denial.

its-fine
Renaee
Reply to  paqnation
March 9, 2026 5:29 pm

Yes – good reminder!

monk
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 9, 2026 4:21 pm

I’m planning my autumn garden with a lot of enthusiasm this year, let me tell you!

paqnation
Reply to  monk
March 9, 2026 5:18 pm

I know what you mean. Everything I’m doing lately I’m genuinely telling myself this may be the last time I do this.

Michael Dowd’s “True Acceptance” revolved around this insane mentality. It took WW3 for me to finally attain it. 😂

ps. I blame it all on Iran.

Irans-fault
Renaee
Reply to  monk
March 9, 2026 5:23 pm

Your friend Nathan is a great resource atm…latest susbstack note:

“I published this today through Wise Response. The situation has moved fast since last week’s release.

The new story isn’t the strait closure, that’s established. It’s the Force Majeure cascade. Suppliers across the Gulf and Asia are formally declaring they can’t fulfil contracts. That includes companies in South Korea and Singapore, where 81% of NZ’s fuel comes from.

Oil hit US$109 overnight. NZ has 2-3 weeks of physical fuel in the country. The government hasn’t said a word.”

https://open.substack.com/pub/wiseresponse/p/hormuz-crisis-deepens-one-week-in?utm_campaign=post-expanded-share&utm_medium=post%20viewer

HideAway
HideAway
March 8, 2026 11:03 pm

Just looking at Australia’s situation in the big scheme of things at present with the war. Australia has around 20-25 days of fuel at any one time. Our strategic reserve is kept in the USA, which means politicians of both sides of politics have been negligent of ever expecting the Middle East oil to go offline quickly.

We get our fuel from refineries in South Korea, Singapore, Japan, China, India and a bit from Vietnam, Malaysia, etc.

Where do those countries get their crude oil from?? Mostly the Middle East…

What happens when the shipments of crude stop entering those countries?? The first casualties will be exports of products, probably by government edict..

What happens to Australia?? Probably no imports, which accounts for nearly 100% of the fuel used here. Whatever crude oil Australia produces, we export, as our 2 remaining refineries don’t use that quality oil, they both import their crude oil from the Middle East…

Because of ships in transit, then none of this bites yet, but wait a few weeks at most for these ships to get to whatever destination, empty their cargo…

I’d expect that in 2-3 weeks the governments here will wake up to no fuel imports, assuming the war is ongoing, and start implementing harsh rationing. Firstly to motorists, then increasingly to ‘others’. Perhaps they will introduce the previously practiced lockdowns again, as a method of saving fuel.

Of course if the oil price skyrockets and stock markets start to crash, then I expect TACO (Trump Always Chickens Out), very quickly, always with the excuse of winning of course..

At some point in the future or perhaps in the near present, the oil exports from the Middle East will greatly diminish just due to depletion, down 5% one year 10% the next, greater the following year. The effect on the refineries in South Korea, Japan, Singapore, China etc will all be the same, yet by then there will be no war that can suddenly be stopped, nor new finds to come online…

Renaee
Reply to  HideAway
March 8, 2026 11:36 pm

ABC news headlines today tell a lot:

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2026-03-09/asx-markets-business-news-live-updates-march-9/106429652

and

https://www.news.com.au/national/politics/australians-not-to-panic-buy-food-as-iran-war-enters-10th-day/news-story/793c798a9c5097be3d37c542b6b9a6a3

This statement from Infrastructure Minister Catherine King who uses panic multiple times in the same sentence telling people not to panic!!”

“Really, the message is people shouldn’t be panicked and shouldn’t panic into panic buying fuel, into panic buying food too,” she said.

paqnation
Reply to  Renaee
March 9, 2026 12:03 am

LOL!!! She was channeling Mr Subliminal.

(funny bit from 1989. Trump has been famous forever)

Renaee
March 8, 2026 9:58 pm

This past 10 days have been an emotional roller coaster. A couple of days ago I realised that I needed to put down in writing a plan, in terms of my hopes and expectations for a Cactus type unravelling. This has helped enormously with my peace of mind. It makes no difference to the outcome, but it helps to know i have done all I can to prepare. I have also come clean to my immediate family about my expectations and this helps too. I feel grateful and happy today, and that is pretty amazing given where we are at.

I have planted 2 square meters of broad beans this morning, to be harvested in early spring, if we pick and eat those beans, it feels like that will be a miracle too.

While checking some planting facts about broad beans, I came upon a blog post that suggested we should all bow down to the fava bean as our new lord and master!

Despite the rich cultural heritage, no civilisation has ever, so far as we know, worshipped a broad bean god – which seams like a terrible oversight given the bean’s awe-inspiring properties. Therefore we give you a god of our own creation: Lord Fava, the best and only broad bean god to have ever existed. He is great and powerful. Love and fear him. If you have a pre-existing blood condition, he might smite you. But for the rest of us he brings fertility and protein. His hands are surrounded by powerful balls of nitrogen fixing nodules. They are filled with magical microbes, his familiars. I say ‘he’ but ‘he’, like most plants, is hermaphroditic. No body knows what’s underneath that loin cloth. Join us in prayer, and the sacrifice of a young goat, as we thank Lord Fava and the Broad Beans.

One to rival Gaia’s Sun God 😉

Edit – removed link to Google Doc.

Last edited 25 days ago by Renaee
Renaee
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 8, 2026 11:28 pm

Thanks Rob,

That is some good suggestions. I do have a spread sheet going (something you inspired me to do) it has nothing like the level of detail yours does, but I am gradually getting it to a state where I can update and work with it. I also needed to have stated clearly the plan overall, rather than just thinking about food and water storage.

I also organised a spare room in our house and put in a 4 by 4 Ikea book shelf (told my partner to take down all his books!) and this has made a huge difference to be able to see clearly everything and have one square for each type of food. I wonder how you manage with storing it all? – that is one of the trickiest parts I have had over the years, not being able to see what I had in eyeshot. The room can be completely dark, and I have the sealed water stored there too.

I have been doing some level of prepping for quite a long while, through two different rental properties where I had to empty all the water containers and use up all our supplies, so I do have the habit of buying what we eat, making sure to take from the stash, and then we top up with a replacement item somewhat. But now I have identified the short fall and where I need to get it up to my 2 month plan. This is what I had not done, actually calculated it on a specific time period, so I know after that – we’re cactus 😉

I do have sardines in my canned protein mix, along with tuna and anchovies, and I use these often too, so they get replaced. I dont think I have any ready to eat meals, other than 2 min noodle type packs, so some more ‘gourmet’ type ones, the Indian pouches or asian all in one packs, is a good idea.

I have stock/boulioun and also a jar of bone broth concentrate that can be kept on the shelf for a month or two, very high in non muscle meat protein.

I will add a few more canned veg variety, however this is one item i rarely ever eat normally, but some dried veg/mushroom that can bulk up soups is a good idea.

And check to more peanut butter! I also forgot to include our dog food, which I have bought in bulk too, but it would be a different diet for our dog, can’t do fresh meat.

Finally – I was wondering why you are not keen to use wood as fuel source?

Duke
Duke
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 9, 2026 7:11 am

Not sure if this will help you Renaee. I don’t know where you live or how much land you have. So it may be for other’s who have some land and live in the USA. We have been at it for 20 years and the following are suppliers we have used that are dependable and economical.

Kriegers Nursery: All sorts of fruit and berry bushes along with asparagus etc. They have an amazing deal for wholesale prices. We usually buy enough to qualify or we will combine an order with neighbors.

Cold Stream Farm: Great selection of trees including nuts. We rarely have a problem with them not making through the first year. Once again great prices. Good place to start if you think pollarding or coppicing is in your future.

https://www.yodersproduce.com/. Seeds, fencing, fertilizers etc. If you need it for your farm or greenhouse they have it at a big discount from normal retail. They are Mennonites so ordering and paying are different from what you are used to but you get used to it.

Good luck and happy to answer any questions,

el mar
el mar
March 8, 2026 11:33 am

Without CACTUS-awareness. Nevertheless an interesting analysis by n0by from “das gelbe Forum”!

“While the US is bombing Iran – why is China remaining silent?”
n0by , Sonneberg , Sunday, March 8, 2026, 6:55 PM @ Odysseus 64 Viewshttps://www.dasgelbeforum.net/themes/dgfmobil/images/home.svg

Bekir Yilmaz writes: “While the US is bombing Iran – why does China remain silent?”
Many people ask exactly this question.
“Why is China so quiet? Its energy partner is being bombed. A vital trade route is being destroyed. Why isn’t it reacting?”
The answer is so simple that many analysts overlook it.
You don’t intervene if the opponent destroys himself.
Let me explain…
Everyone is saying: “The US and Israel attacked Iran.”
But what has Iran done?
Please read carefully.
First: The Strait of Hormuz.
20% of the world’s oil supply passes through this strait. Millions of barrels every day. It is one of the most critical maritime bottlenecks in the world.
Iran has closed them.
Not with a naval fleet. Not with warships.
With cheap drones.
Without deploying a single warship, Iran has blocked one of the world’s most important maritime trade routes. The Gulf states have suffered severe economic damage.
Second: attacks on Gulf states.
Kuwait was attacked. Iraq was attacked. Saudi Arabia was attacked. The United Arab Emirates were attacked.
Let me give you some numbers.
Against the UAE alone: ​​189 ballistic missiles and 941 drone attacks.
These countries have been buying weapons from America for decades. They have spent trillions of dollars. Patriot systems. THAAD systems. They said: “The most advanced air defense in the world.”
What happened?
The UAE’s air defense system shot down only 3 out of 189 ballistic missiles. Of 941 drones, only 121 were intercepted.
Defense systems costing billions were practically helpless.
Drones costing $35,000 crashed in the middle of cities.
And the whole world saw the real problem.
To shoot down a drone that costs $35,000, you fire a missile that costs $1.4 million.
Read this number again.
$35,000 versus $1.4 million.
Imagine it like this:
Someone throws stones at your house every day. Each stone costs 1 euro. You respond to each stone with a bullet costing 40 euros. Some windows are still hit, some break, and the television is destroyed.
This war is not sustainable in the long run. And Iran knows that.
Everyone says: “China is doing nothing.”
Incorrect.
Iran’s missiles do not find their targets using American GPS, but rather Chinese satellites. Critical targets in the Gulf States – US bases, data centers, and production facilities – are located with the help of Chinese satellite navigation.
What happened before the war?
Russia, China and Iran conducted joint naval exercises in the Strait of Hormuz.
China did not enter the ring itself. But it prepared its partner in training.
It provided navigation. It provided technology. It coordinated exercises.
Then it took a step back and began to observe.
Let’s now look at this from the perspective of the Gulf States.
They bought American weapons for decades. They spent trillions of dollars. They were told: “You are safe.”
Iran attacked airports, hotels, and ports with $35,000 drones.
And what did America say after that?
“Continue buying US Treasury bonds.”
The result?
Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Kuwait, and Qatar are now at the table. They are reviewing the clauses of their agreements with the US. They are discussing the cancellation of investment commitments. They are considering selling existing assets.
These countries had only a few months ago made investment pledges of over $2 trillion to the USA.
Now they are discussing exiting the system.
China didn’t do that. The US caused it with its own hands.
The US dragged all its allies into a war – solely for its own interests. The weapons they sold couldn’t protect their partners. And then they told those same partners: “Keep investing in us.”
The math no longer adds up. And when the math no longer adds up, loyalty disappears too.
While everyone is looking at America – what has China been quietly doing over the last ten years?
In 2023, Saudi Arabia began selling oil to China in yuan. That alone should have made headlines for a month. But it didn’t.
BRICS has been expanded. Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Iran – three energy giants – are now in the same bloc.
China has established CIPS as an alternative to SWIFT. Countries outside the West can now trade without using the dollar.
All these steps were taken before a single bomb was dropped on Iran.
One of the quietest, but most destructive movements:
China is continuously selling US Treasury bonds.
China’s foreign exchange reserves once stood at $1.3 trillion. By November 2025, they had fallen to $682 billion – the lowest level since 2008.
What is China buying with this money?
Gold.
Now let’s turn to China’s actual move.
Africa.
The world’s youngest continent. Its population is expected to reach 2.5 billion by 2050.
Twenty years ago, China understood: Whoever builds Africa’s infrastructure sets the rules of the 21st century.
What did the USA do?
They spent 4 trillion dollars in Iraq and Afghanistan. They destroyed. They bombed. And then they withdrew. Chaos remained.
What did China do during the same period?
It invested $182 billion in infrastructure in 49 African countries.
– Railway construction in Kenya – Dams in Ethiopia – Port construction in Djibouti – $20 billion oil and gas plant in Nigeria – $10 billion hydroelectric power plant in the Congo – Africa’s largest solar power plant in Namibia – Technology center in Rwanda – Telecommunications network based on Huawei infrastructure across the continent
In 2025, the trade volume between Africa and China reached $348 billion.
How was this achieved?
Without a single shot fired. Without a single regime change. Without sanctions. Without democracy lectures.
The US destroyed with $4 trillion. China built with $182 billion.
Achieved more with less effort.
Now ask yourself:
What kind of phones will 2.5 billion Africans use in 2040? Which network will they use to access the internet? On whose railways will their goods be transported?
China has already given its answer.
Whoever builds the infrastructure sets the rules.
Napoleon is said to have said: “Never interrupt your enemy when he makes a mistake.”
Xi Jinping has turned this into a 50-year-old doctrine.
China is not fighting. It is building.
China doesn’t threaten. It signs treaties.
China is not shouting. It is silent.
And meanwhile, it quietly takes over those alliances that America is destroying with its own hands.
Europe is beginning to turn towards China. The Gulf States are beginning to turn towards China. Cracks are appearing within NATO.
With every war, America spends trillions. It uses up its ammunition. It destabilizes energy markets. It demonstrates that its weapons don’t work. It loses its partners in the Gulf.
And it is driving the world, step by step, into the system that Beijing has built over the last 20 years.
Everyone is asking: “Why is China silent?”
Because silence itself is the strategy.
And the process is actually progressing faster than Beijing had expected.”

Saludos

el mar

el mar
el mar
Reply to  el mar
March 8, 2026 11:36 am

Rob, please add a “K” in the headline!

Duke
Duke
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 9, 2026 3:38 am

We by a lot from VEVOR. Water pumps for irrigation, raised grow beds etc. Was going to get one of those diesel heaters. Friend has one and swears by it. Don’t be scared of the cheap prices.

nikoB
nikoB
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 8, 2026 1:05 pm

It certainly feels like the US/Israel is going for the hail mary pass. Winner takes all.
Pity it will only be useless casino chips from a bankrupt casino.

Felix
Felix
March 7, 2026 2:57 pm

Many have point out that in the social media posts from Trump, he’s speaking like a petulant child who didn’t get what he wanted. I think there’s something more going on here. if you’ve paid attention to how he actually “negotiates” he uses the old “door in the face” method. Basically you ask for something so ridiculous you know it won’t get accepted, then when you introduce your actual demands which are less egregious you can present them as a “compromise”. Things like Regime Change will simply not happen in Iran, no country has the stomach to implement it there (or at least I hope not). His real aims are probably more like strong-arming Iran into some sort of oil deal that ices out China, opening up the country to trade or something to that effect. He’s been unclear on his war aims because as the war goes more and more against him, he increases his demands to make it appear as though he actually has a stronger position. Of course this all depends on whether Iran will be willing to speak with him after the last couple of times they tried to negotiate, he and his war criminal pals in israel shot the messengers.

Trump makes a lot more sense when you think of him like a failed used car salesman. He’ll never say what he really wants, he’s just trying to feel out what he can get out of the swindle.

Felix
Felix
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 7, 2026 2:46 pm

One thing to keep in mind is that netanyahu is deeply unpopular in israel. This is being viewed as his war of aggression both in the United States and Israel. The irony is that I think the “regime” most likely to get changed is his. If Iran knocks out the energy infrastructure of israel and causes the economy to implode, i doubt he’ll be in office much longer. I can only hope cooler heads will prevail

Stellarwind72
Reply to  Felix
March 7, 2026 8:51 pm

I’d love to see Bibi sent to the Hague. On top of that, he may also face domestic charges for corruption as well.

Last edited 27 days ago by Stellarwind72
Stellarwind72
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 7, 2026 9:56 am

We might be in the calm before the storm, which is quite odd since markets normally react much quicker than this.

wiley_coyote4
Felix
Felix
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 7, 2026 2:42 pm

Ya I don’t get it either. Oil is up almost 50% though and it’ll just continue to rise until the straights are reopened. What really matters from an economic standpoint is whether Iran will allow oil from other countries through the straight. The minute Iran says that it will allow traffic from some country through, I’d imagine all of the ships will then claim they’re from that country (most of these ships fly under a different country’s flag anyway) and traffic will resume.

Either way the war can’t go on like this for longer than a couple more weeks. The US will likely run out of precision bombs, the carriers will need to restock, and missile defenses will deplete. Once the US and Israel run out of firepower, I’d expect for them to walk back their regime change plans. Iran will probably get pressured by its allies to also call a ceasefire in order to resume the flow of trade. In a couple of weeks oil will spike to over $150 a barrel, which I’ve heard is around the breaking point for the world economy. At that point there will be so much international and more importantly domestic pressure to conclude the war that Trump will need to figure out a way to call it quits.

In other news from the heart of the empire, I was in a bar last night and I overheard a group of guys next to me yelling about how even though they voted for trump, they have no desire to die for israel. I think enough people realize this war is horribly misguided to prevent it from spiraling much longer, or at least i hope.

Charles
Charles
March 7, 2026 4:56 am

Just a short comment in case.
It was great being part of this small community for a while.
It was a big help for me in times of extreme darkness.
Thank you.
I wish to you all, the best of journey.
Whatever happens, things are well.

Smile
Smile
Reply to  Charles
March 7, 2026 6:45 am

What’s going on ?? I had bad feeling too since last night

Charles
Charles
Reply to  Smile
March 8, 2026 12:50 am

Sorry, I didn’t want to trigger a reaction of fear.
It seems to me, this war is a last desperate attempt to go on a trajectory that fails eventually.
Don’t worry, there is ample room for the peaceful and the (seemingly) weak in this world. But, we each have some personal work to do, things to uncover, don’t we?
“Smile”, that’s good for a nickname.
I wish you all the best.

Anonymous
Anonymous
Reply to  Charles
March 8, 2026 7:41 am

Charles, do you share the CACTUS fast collapse view?

Charles
Charles
Reply to  Anonymous
March 8, 2026 1:34 pm

Thank you for this difficult and fascinating question. Not entirely, but, as you will see, I am quite crazy and no reference at all 🙂

I agree with the necessity of interconnectivity, scale and the continuation of growth to avoid this current system from collapsing. I agree with the feedback loops (energy, mineral) that make decline of material flows very abrupt (I don’t know, maybe less than a decade to reach 10%?). I agree with the fact that there are too many people stacked in big cities, with no access to land, dependent on this whole system. I agree with the accumulated lies in the form of debt or over-inflated stocks that hide the true nature of reality. I agree with the fact that there is far more complexity in many aspects of this civilisation than anything which can be sustained without the current material flows. I agree with the advanced degradation of the land in many places due to industrial practices.

But, I am not sure this all necessarily results in a Madmax scenario. I disagree with the fact that humans necessarily go one against another in times of scarcity. I disagree with the fact that this is the most efficient system to feed humans (hopefully), because to maximize the number of humans is not the only goal of this system. I disagree with the fact that decoupling is impossible. So I think it may be possible, that regions of the globe experience collapse at different times in turns. I think there is lots of uselessness in this system that is necessary only to get growth going (chips for everybody, cars for everybody, flight…). This is necessary to keep the scale going, so that the investments continue. But degrowth will be a different game. Also, most of the modern medical system, large administrations, management, media, advertisement seem counter-productive and quite expensive. I disagree with the fact that land distribution and tax laws are immutable. I disagree with the fact that having some form of shelter in the countryside for increasing population there, while the cities empty is impossible. I disagree with the fact that once energy declines, damage on the environment increases. I note population in many regions of the world has begun to decline. I believe war and central powers are failing strategies in a degrowth world. I believe it will be increasingly different according to places. I know it is possible to regenerate the land. I believe the capacities of the body are under-explored by modern man. I believe there is more. I know I don’t know much.
But, remember, I live in France, Europe. A continent which is already experiencing slow and accelerating degrowth (population-wise, affluence-wise)

About climate change, that’s happening too. But I believe the biotic pump (water flows moved by life) is a real thing. The planet will grow back forests and this is the path to attenuating the negative effects of climate change.

Basically, I believe many aspects of modernity will be lost very quickly, all the luxuries, all the comfort. I believe it will be physically very hard for many. But also a time of reconnection with the body, the heart, other people and life. I believe human beings used to have direct contact with other lifeforms (“talk” to animals). I believe we are in a flow of consciousness. I believe we are in the wake of a major cultural shift that will be another progress, but not material this time. I believe life endures.

I believe we have a choice. I believe we must live with the consequences of our choices (in this life or another). I believe our individual lives matter, each context is different and reality can’t be put in words. I believe in bigger things than the material body. I believe there is “some form” of continuity after the loss of this body. Although, death and losses must be accepted. I believe reality to be much richer than what I have access to, although it’s all there. I believe linear time to be an illusion. But an illusion that matters while I am in this form. Apparent paradoxes, but only to the human mind.

You can think of me as crazy. It’s OK. I own it. I have seen and experienced a lot, but it is such a ridicule fraction of what is possible. I love life as it is, with all its hardship. All my suffering comes from my own, yet I also know I am fallible. So I try my best. And I am not too hard on myself. The destination is now, is freedom, is love, is peace, is joy.

🙂

I am grateful. Even to the fear and anger I hold within for so long. Even for the chronic pain. Because, this is what forged me and made me go on. Because this is how it goes until we can see a little bit better. Because there are reasons, even if I can’t understand them, yet. Because, I am convinced I chose it, at some level.
We all try our best, in our way. It’s a process.

🙂

I say all of this, because I am convinced each of us has some deep personal reason to be fascinated by world events and trying to predict future events. So I believe your question is not really about what you ask.

🙂

These words may not matter to you now: there are some things that must be experienced to understand.
These words may not matter to you at all: it’s me, my choice.
I just share.
Maybe this is all just misleading…

🙂

HideAway
HideAway
Reply to  Charles
March 8, 2026 5:32 pm

Hi Charles, you knew I was going to jump in…

 I disagree with the fact that having some form of shelter in the countryside for increasing population there, while the cities empty is impossible.”

When do the cities start emptying?? In my view of what’s actually happening in the world, the cities start emptying after food fails to get to cities, during collapse, not before.

At this point, where does the co-ordination, the energy and materials come from to build shelter for all these people?

Where does the food come from to feed these people in the very short term?? People require food in the very short term, long before they have been able to build anything approaching a long term sustainable food source…

To have people leave cities en masse to provide shelter and food, water, clothing, warmth sources, all takes time, energy, materials, training and continuity of food while the transition happens. Governments would need to change land ownership and occupation rules and regulations, all while there is plenty of surplus to allow the time for this transition.

People mostly just don’t want to go and live a hard life in simple shelters, while tending the land for their own food. They prefer the modern conveniences of existing western lifestyles and will cling to these until it’s too late. Then those that did want to get away from modernity will have hordes to deal with when the food fails to get to cities..

 I believe our individual lives matter, each context is different and reality can’t be put in words. I believe in bigger things than the material body. I believe there is “some form” of continuity after the loss of this body.

Here is the real difference between us. I don’t believe there is a ‘purpose’ to anything. There is nothing ‘bigger’, nor any continuity after my life, just like there was nothing before my life.
It’s one of humanities hardest to accept realities that our consciousness is just chemical and electrical reactions within the brain, because we all crave for more, better or something greater.

Denial of reality is deeply ingrained in humans…

HideAway
HideAway
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 8, 2026 10:33 pm

Rob, “Anyone like Hideaway that’s done the work and is ready to live without modernity “

Unfortunately that’s not the case at all, though I’ve made plenty of plans and preparations over the years.

The more I’ve ever ‘prepared’, the more I end up thinking Fast Eddy is near to correct. There is always something else required to keep anything modern operating.

Do we have plenty of mattocks, shovels, hoes, hoses, gravity fed water, wood heater, wood, saws, axes, etc, yes we do, but I’m not young anymore and have plenty of injuries built up over a lifetime..

The farm side has to be commercial to exist and pay for taxes, insurance, water rights, farm registration, etc. It relies on tractors, mowers, pumps, irrigation lines, cool rooms, etc. We have both on grid and off grid power, but things break, need repairs, need replacement parts or just replacement themselves. There is always something more…

el mar
el mar
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 9, 2026 1:05 am

I believe that as soon as we get close to Seneca Cliff, the government will lose all control.
Why should police officers do their job, for example, if they can no longer be paid?

Charles
Charles
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 8, 2026 5:13 am

You are welcome 🙂

Yesterday, a Portuguese guy told me a nice story. In his hometown, up in the mountains, his father owned some land. When his father died, he didn’t claim the land (although he could do it anytime as long as there are at least 3 witnesses who can testimony his father owned it). He chose to do so, because there is no road to access the land, and he currently lives in France. So he didn’t want to pay taxes for nothing. As a result, 20 years later, this is now a small forest, some room for the wild games. (It seems even a few wolves come at night around the houses).
In a way, this place is already post-collapse and nature has already started claiming some territory back in Europe.
🙂

paqnation
March 6, 2026 4:13 pm

When SHTF, the unprepared fools who try to steal our food will never get past our security system.

Btw, this is gonna be an excellent harvest. Should keep our bellies full for about two minutes. Feels good to be self-sufficient.

Guardian-of-the-garden
paqnation
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 7, 2026 1:18 pm

LOL

You made me think about who in this audience is packing heat. Because there’s so many non americans here, I’m guessing there’s not a lot of guns. 

My household has just one. A 357 Magnum s&w revolver that I bought at the start of covid. I haven’t fired it once (but I was assured that you can leave a revolver alone for twenty years and it’ll still work no problem).

For some reason I picture AJ with the most. An arsenal in his rec room just like Burt & Heather in ‘Tremors’ 😊

burt-gummer
nikoB
nikoB
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 6, 2026 3:32 pm

Everyday this war continues is a speeding up of collapse I feel.
Like going broke. Slowly at first and then all at once.

AJ
AJ
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 7, 2026 4:27 am

Yes, the pendulum swings and at some point Trump and his sycophants will become scared of losing and then I fear the nukes – they are Jesus’s army of Armageddon and Nukes will bring the Sun/Son to earth (probably to vaporize them in the return fire).
Just my pessimistic thoughts at 4 a.m.

AJ

Stellarwind72
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 6, 2026 12:32 pm

A nuclear-armed Iran is such an existential threat because they just murdered tens of thousands of civilians in Gaza. Oh wait. That wasn’t Iran, that was Israel.

Duke
Duke
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 7, 2026 6:54 am

Art is getting very hard to follow. This is from 3 days ago

Stellarwind72
March 6, 2026 10:17 am

https://thehonestsorcerer.substack.com/p/the-war-in-iran-a-giant-leap-towards

The Iran crisis puts Europe also in a dire economic situation, as EU gas storage is already at a 5-year low, with France and Germany hitting record lows at the time of this writing. With regulations aimed at completely choking off all hydrocarbon imports from Russia, the continent’s energy future now looks bleaker than ever. Even as Europe buys “just” 17% of its oil and less than 4% of its natural gas from the Middle Eastern states affected, these commodities are “priced at the margin”—meaning the price is determined by the cost of acquiring the last (marginal) unit needed to meet demand, rather than the average cost of all units. Hence the vertical take off in the European TTF and Asian LNG markets. India, as a result, has already slashed gas supply to industrial users, as it is unable to pay more for LNG. And before you shrug it off with ‘then they will switch to coal’: natural gas is not just for heating and electricity generation. It’s a vital input to fertilizer manufacturing, a whole range of chemicals, as well as for making glass, cement and much more.

I suspect that the war in Iran will be the nail in the coffin for European Industry.
At least the war is happening right before the beginning of Spring, so they have 9 months to figure out what to do for heating next winter.
But on the downside, that is the beginning of the growing season…

Last edited 28 days ago by Stellarwind72
Florian
Florian
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 6, 2026 12:52 pm

That last line is gold! It could easily serve as a punch line in a stand up show.

Speaking of Germany. As a citizen of a German-speaking country I’m *amazed* to see how my countrymen react to this this war and it’s news. Since Monday every single day I read proclamations that this war in the middle east is a wake up call to free ourself of the corrupt fossil fuel industry and the dictators at the helm. We now finally have no other choice than to go full speed into the clean energy future. And it’s obviously so much cheaper and more economic anyway. Mind you that this is brought forward to not by some users of an obscure forum but in the opinion sections of big newspapers and politicians.

Since we have an international readership here I want to pose the question if this is a mental pathology specific to us Central Europeans or a common one.

AJ
AJ
March 6, 2026 6:11 am

Indi.ca has a quite aware post today:
https://indi.ca/economic-crash-incoming/

It is worth the read.
His last sentence is where I’m at:Whatever you’re doing to get ready, do it now. Too soon becomes too late before you know it.”

Carpe diem friends.

AJ

Captain Ahab
Captain Ahab
March 6, 2026 3:51 am

Everyone enjoying the end of the beginning and the beginning of the end.
Can’t see many fuckers worried about the climate and stuff right now.
Surely with a few nukes we can get to 3.5 degree above.

Stellarwind72
Reply to  Captain Ahab
March 6, 2026 10:06 am

Using Nuclear weapons would actually cool the climate.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_winter

Last edited 28 days ago by Stellarwind72
AJ
AJ
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 6, 2026 3:30 am

Trump and crew are delusional. Did anyone see the evangelical prayer group in the Oval office? That’s where the devil is (if you believed that stuff). I still am looking at Quark’s timeline $100 oil by the end of next week and economic collapse by the end of the month (all in celebration of my birthday!!). Any plans beyond that look silly.

AJ

Flippr
Flippr
Reply to  AJ
March 6, 2026 3:34 am

Agreed AJ, the religious aspect adds a whole other dimension to all of this!

How old will you be, if you don’t mind sharing?

Last edited 29 days ago by Flippr
AJ
AJ
Reply to  Flippr
March 6, 2026 6:06 am

73, long past my expiration date.

AJ

HideAway
HideAway
March 5, 2026 9:09 pm

Playing Devil’s advocate for a couple of minutes… We have all assumed that TPTB do not understand Limits to Growth CACTUS etc, but what if they do and have since the early 1970’s..

Afterall the ‘intelligence services’ have had a lot more computer power and high paid full time analysts than any of us for all these decades..

Which means they understood more than the Limits to Growth team came up with (added CACTUS), EROEI, lower grades of ores, complexity, etc)…

How would they have acted, knowing general collapse was sometime in the future, and no-way to avoid it but they still had a few decades but were keen on acting in their own interests, just like nearly everyone else (MPP in action)??

Would they have dropped interest rates and gone into a lot of unrepayable debt over decades?

Would they have encouraged other countries to develop their resources to cheaply send the ‘west’ cheap goods for decades and use up their coal, gas and oil?

Would they insist on payments in a currency they control?

Would they allow poor environment laws ‘over there’ while cleaning up their countries to make themselves look like the good guys?

Would they attack with spurious reasons, any level of independence attempts?

Would they try to make the world as efficient as possible for their own benefit, while the good times lasted?

Would they increase all the rules on their own citizens all in the name of ‘security’, or health, or safety??

Would they lie about the wonderful possible future, of nuclear, renewables, A.I. and space colonization to keep the population preoccupied??

Would they increase the inequality of the existing system, while lying about standards of living, to their own people?

What would they do as the collapse approached to near short term inevitable??

Would they try to distract and keep everything going as normally as possible for themselves, while blaming and attacking others?

What would a smart magnanimous society do?? I’d say none of the above..

Any thoughts??

HideAway
HideAway
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 5, 2026 11:12 pm

I only had an hour or 2 sleep myself last night..

I often try to turn something around 100% to see if it changes the results. As in what if my thinking on this was 100% wrong, and it was the opposite, how does it change things.

The above list of questions, could show it’s either, but might be a guide into the future if they did know and were living life to the fullest, their way..

OK maybe I’m just too tired..

Gaia gardener
Gaia gardener
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 7, 2026 3:34 am

Hello there dear Rob, Hideaway and all friends,

It’s a sign! It turns out that one of my rare contributions to the hall of fame quote bar is co-located next to this thread and which directly addresses this topic! I am grasping at straws as of late for small miracles with all that is crashing all around us.

When I first hit the ground running here with my endless paragraphing, I tried several times to express one of the ideas that has always been bouncing around my head, in fact I believe it was the main subject of my debut post. I have always had the intuition that there was Something driving the bus, a Hidden Hand that directed all world players, and their means and methods have become the very fabric of society. I surmised that if my little brain could understand that our overshoot would be the eventual undoing of us all, then surely those who had the real power (perhaps because they had a bigger brain) would also be aware of our predicament, even if their reaction outwardly did not betray their agenda. In fact this must be so in order to accomplish their ultimate goals behind the scenes without causing disruption to society before the mission is achieved.

In those early days of my full collapse awakening, it seemed clear to me that first reducing and then controlling the mass population would be a major goal in order to engineer a controlled collapse (yes this was pre-Hideaway, I did have hopium for a softer landing) for the best chance of overall human and planetary survival. To me, that agenda went a far way to explaining why and how the whole Covid chronicles were machinated. I have made numerous posts on this to various reception. Rob, our fearless leader then and now, in addition to reining in my verbiage, cautioned me to not let my imagination run away without any proof, of which of course I could not provide as that is also part of the utmost elite’s agenda to be able to infiltrate without declaring any overt motive. He has believed that there was no one driving the bus, whereas the evidence available to my understanding, which was the bare-faced reality of what did occur, did not disprove it, either.

The Covid years segued into the critical Climate crisis with exponential warming and it became even clearer to me that time for any action on anything was being quickly truncated. Whoever would be driving the bus would now have to put the pedal to the metal in getting any agenda through–perhaps that explains the AI explosion as that seems obvious to me an attempt to continue our technological and material existence without as many humans (of course we here know that it will be futile). Also, the geopolitical reshuffling and resource consolidation would be accelerated, and this has also proven to be true. Above all, there would have to be another world war to solidify the final positioning with the US and China being the main game pieces remaining on the board, many others will have been already sacrificed to reach this late stage.

All is unfolding because this is how empires and civilisations always end, but it seems logical that the timing and manner have been stacked. Alas, we are now staring down the barrel of nuclear war, and just one week of mayhem and destruction in the Middle East should abandon any hope that such exchange would be limited. Whoever (whatever?) might be driving the bus is steering all of us headlong off the cliff. Maybe they have an eject button which will be pressed at the final moment just before the rest of us careen off? If this scenario could be portrayed as a cartoon, it might be bearable to watch, especially since we are actually its participants and not just the audience. Oh well, maybe we’ll have the last laugh when the villains (or are they the saviours of the planet?) after ejecting themselves from plunging to sure death, land bum first into a field of spiky Cactus. That’ll teach them, for nature (which includes thermodynamics) always bats last and wins.

Anyway, that’s Gaia’s two cents again. I really hope everyone here is going as well as possible. It’s been amazing to be part of this fellowship here, and all good things do eventually come to an end but I hope we will have more time together yet. I trust you will find the courage to do what you need and desire, and peace will be well earned and assured. Sending love and strength to you all.

Namaste, friends.

Charles
Charles
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 8, 2026 5:00 am

About Gaza, maybe, so that when the war in Iran is waged, there is no resistance coming for the back of Israel.
Covid is linked to these events, but I can’t figure out how exactly, yet. This was probably plan A, and now is plan B of different shades of “elites” controlling the empire in response to degrowth.

Jeffrey Strahl
Jeffrey Strahl
March 5, 2026 8:37 pm

You have a good handle on a major aspect of the situation. But there’s more.
(When i use terms like Iran or Qatar, i am referring to state/business entities, not to peoples. All such entities are oppressive to the populations they control. The 99+% have no homeland, only different oppressors.) 
This is not a “totally irrational unnecessary war,” at least not per the rationality of the reigning global system. Regarding claims that the US and Iran were close to a deal: theywere not remotely close. , Iran. asserted it has a right to enrichment and also would not discuss missiles program, proxies. The US demanded zero enrichment, discussion of missiles, proxies. Iran claimed they were close to a deal, as was Oman, the mediator, hoping to prevent a war.
There is a reason for this war, but no one is being honest about what it is. Global financial markets as well as jobs markets have been a mess lately, i’ve been posting Eurodollar University videos in this regard in my Lockdown Times newsletters,….This war is not a distraction from something (a friend of mine told me it’s a distraction from the Epstein matter. LOL!), but is a part of the opening phases of World War 3. The China state/business entity has heavily committed to investing in Iran, some $400 billion! and Iran is its main supplier of oil. Iran is a key component of China’s planned Belt and Road Initiative, the core of what would be the China-dominated “Multipolar World Order.”  I would not have called Wars 1 and 2 distractions or aberrations either. They were inevitable results of worsening global capitalist crises, just like the one today.  One was in the early 1910s (analyzed by Rosa Luxemburg in her 1915 book The Junius Pamphlet, written while she, a member of the Reichstag, the German parliament, was in prison in Germany) and one in the 1930s, analyzed at by many people. Luxemburg presciently predicted it in The Junius Pamphlet as well.” The world doesn’t need it, but the global capitalist industrial system demands it. And today’s crisis is greatly exacerbated by the crisis of shrinking feasible energy/raw materials supplies and the accelerating destruction of the ecosystem. Don’t like it? Hat it? Then get rid of this EFFING system, before it kills us all.

Jeffrey Strahl
Jeffrey Strahl
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 5, 2026 10:11 pm

Fair points. I did not mean with the quotes that you, Rob, said these things, they are simply statements which i hear frequently. I apologize for the confusion. I do disagree with the idea which you implied that the people running the US government (and i am totally convinced these are NOT Trump and company) had any sort of choice about the matter. The several crises which are occurring simultaneously (excuse me, but i do not like the term “poly-crisis” which is being bandied around the web), including the global economy’s own structural crisis, independent of the material conditions, are basically channeling all of the world’s state/business entities into one mode of action, that of dog-eat-dog. I totally agree it’s extremely likely that this will not end well, more like with end with our end. Thank you.

Jeffrey Strahl
Jeffrey Strahl
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 5, 2026 10:42 pm

No mystery. These are the people who pull the strings, no matter who is present, the masters of the economic structure, people like the Rockefellers, the top ranks of the Tech Bros, the managers of BlackRock, Vanguard and State Street, which control 89% of the S&P. Democrats and Republicans rotate, but these people remain behind the curtain, controlling the economic structure, and with their investment decisions, their buying or not buying government bonds,…”nudge” every single administration. People like them run every other state/business entity in the world. And these entities are in a constant battle for supremacy on the world market. The US’s managers had no choice but to liquidate the present regime in Iran, which is too indebted to the China entity to act against its interests. And the US and China represent mutually exclusive interests, when all is said and done. There was zero choice in terms of WW1, and in terms of WW2, now is no different.

Jeffrey Strahl
Jeffrey Strahl
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 5, 2026 11:23 pm

They have investments in China, but not the level of control. Their China equivalents are the ones in control there. The China state/business entity and the US state/business entity do a lot of business together, but only one of them is gonna be the dominant group in the world. They are fighting for global domination, the same way that the German entity and its allies fought the British and French entities (later joined by their chief creditor the US) fought in WW!, though they had been each other’s best trade partners before the War, and the German and Japanese entities fought the US and British entities in WW2, similarly had been best trade partners. This is precisely what Rosa Luxemburg describes in her 1915 book the Junius Pamphlet, in which she predicted there would be another world war within a couple of decades after “the present one” (as of 1915) ends, and that in it the US would fight Germany for control of Europe and the “Middle East” and Africa, and Japan for control of Asia, even though in 1915 Japan was allied with the British and later the US (once it entered the war). How is that for prescience? This is simply the way of the capitalist system. Expecting capitalists to act rationally in the face of the energy/materials/complexity crisis amounts to not understanding how the system functions.

Jeffrey Strahl
Jeffrey Strahl
Reply to  Rob Mielcarski
March 6, 2026 8:09 am

And thank you, i appreciate your page. I think people like you and Nate Hagens are mistaken in thinking that the capitalists who run the global system while competing with one another are capable of making adjustments in the face of growing real world material and energy shortages, when in fact that even if they weren’t psychopaths or sociopaths they are managers of a system which cannot abide low growth rates, let alone zero growth, and perish the thought of degrowth. Take care.

Hamish
Hamish
March 5, 2026 3:08 pm

I struggle with limited “understanding.”

Most people seem to sail through everything while relying on beliefs based on faith—leading to opinions that are largely worthless.

I have little faith in mainstream media. This makes it difficult to establish a position of absolute truth with regard to:

  • Putin being willing to kill dissidents, e.g., Alexander Litvinenko in the UK, November 2006.
  • The Chinese allegedly operating “secret” police stations in many countries.
  • The U.S. and Semites (and the late Madeleine Albright) having no problem killing schoolgirls.

My “understanding” of the above is that they are all “true enough.”

This means that China, Russia, the U.S., and likely all other entities, to a sufficient extent, have no problem “offing” children. The children of many Chinese leaders are in Western universities, and their whereabouts are well known to the various authorities. China (and Russia) likely know where Western children (often not minors) are located.

Trump has now revealed that killing leaders is acceptable.

The leverage that the various entities have on each other is ridiculously complicated. Putin and Xi Jinping are no doubt wondering: when does NATO run out of missiles? Oil touched $81.92 today. The Strait of Hormuz is effectively closed, and if Iran survives for a few more weeks, it is game over.

While rare-earth metals and dollar hegemony may explain the latest developments in the Middle East, I lean more toward this: oil supply is increasingly constrained. The only solution is to tackle demand and at the scale required – this means working at the country level. Iran is just the latest, after Ukraine, Syria, Libya, Iraq, and Afghanistan, to have its infrastructure decimated. The economic multiplier works in both directions: destroy a country’s GDP, and the GDP of other countries (both exported to and imported from) goes down. This reduces overall oil consumption. Additional leverage for rare-earth metals and the U.S. dollar is just cream at the top.

Cynically, this just allows the oligarchs in the U.S. to continue their wealth extraction.

Hamish.

Stellarwind72
Reply to  Hamish
March 5, 2026 5:46 pm

This means that China, Russia, the U.S., and likely all other entities, to a sufficient extent, have no problem “offing” children.

What happened in Gaza made this abundantly clear.

Hamish
Hamish
Reply to  Stellarwind72
March 5, 2026 6:00 pm

Agreed. Clearly they have no problem killing children, raping them (Epstein), injecting them (the Scamdemic clot shot) – their is no ‘bottom’ to their craven and evil ways.

More on topic : Rob is attributing significant intelligence to our leaders (or their advisers). I think they are sick psychopaths / sociopaths. They are likely hopelessly compromised and/or profoundly stupid. A reminder, the choice was Trumptard or drunken whore Cameltoe.

Either way, we are still utterly fucked and the clock is now running like an engine on nitrous-oxide. People topping up their ‘preps’ are wise.

What is happening is not brinkmanship – it is insanity.

Renaee
March 5, 2026 1:42 pm

Thanks Rob, this is such a clear headed take and you sound like you have over come your anger regarding US leaders (not an easy task) so you are able to focus in on what’s really going on. I really value this analysis and I reckon a lot of other people, who don’t comment but are tuning in, would value it too.

paqnation
March 5, 2026 12:43 pm

What’s a guy gotta do to get some respect around here?!

First it was your Lars Larsen review bumping my fire essay (the greatest essay in the doomasphere) after only 9 days. And now it’s RIP to the 2nd best essay. Didn’t even make it a full week.😡

Kidding of course. I knew I was in trouble the moment WW3 started.

This one of yours is the first time I can recall something making me get off my ass. As soon as I got done reading it this morning I went to the grocery store and loaded up on canned food. (progresso soup had the best deal, 8 for $10. I got 40 cans)

ps. If this site wasn’t already on the govt’s radar, it is now.😉

monk
Reply to  paqnation
March 5, 2026 1:15 pm

I am literally going to go buy rice at lunch time 🙁
I also had a notification from my bank this morning:
“Managing Market volatility. Recent global events and escalation in the Middle East could result in your investment or KiwiSaver [equivalent of 401k in the US] balance going up and down. When uncertainty hits and markets take a dip, it is important not to panic and to ride out the bumps. View our tips here.”

AJ
AJ
Reply to  paqnation
March 5, 2026 1:26 pm

Yeah, great essay Rob. I had Costco send me 6 bags of whole bean French Roast Kirkland coffee (my favorite). When this goes away at least I’ll be alert!! I already have a lot of Vodka but drinking now days always hurts my head latter (so I’ll just give that away to the zombies).

Aj

monk
March 5, 2026 12:19 pm

This is a good review of Sweden’s advice to businesses to prepare business continuity plans for war. This article is in English for a NZ audience. A takeaway for me, the government expects businesses to stay operational, to pivot through challenges, and to continue to have obligations under employment law. They also strongly encourage businesses to have a plan for how to run their business without any digital tools (no phones, computers or internet). 
Good corporate security is good for the nation: Takeaways from Sweden’s crisis and war preparedness framework

CampbellS
March 5, 2026 11:24 am

Nathan Surendran, whose recent whitepaper Monk shared a couple of days ago, is following the CACTUS theory. I’ve shared several previous Un-denial posts with him in the past.

https://substack.com/@energyandresilience/note/c-223519297?r=emthh

Renaee
Reply to  CampbellS
March 5, 2026 1:28 pm

The NZ contingent grows stronger! Nathan is mates with Josesph Mertz – maybe he is tuning in too? I was in a slack channel with both of them for a little while, as Joseph did Jem Bendell’s ‘Leadership and Comms’ course in the same intake I was in, and we had resilience/prepping type chats afterwards for a little while.

trackback
March 5, 2026 9:01 am

[…] My mate Rob Mielcarski on March 5, 2026 wrote this splendid essay everyone here should read… […]

el mar
el mar
March 5, 2026 8:56 am

Now that net energy is declining, the system cycle could be extended if everyone supports each other, if everyone cooperates and eliminates bottlenecks and repairs them, and if resources are allocated optimally.

We would have to cooperate instead of compete.

The opposite is the case, as is human nature. Take what you can get, see where you end up.

Physical scarcity does not have to occur first.
The human survival instinct and “tribal thinking” will probably ensure that we collapse within this decade.

First food, then morals (Berthold Brecht) and
no one is steering the bus!

Saludos

el mar

el mar
el mar
Reply to  el mar
March 5, 2026 10:44 am
AJ
AJ
Reply to  el mar
March 5, 2026 2:08 pm

Wow, very interesting read. Lot’s above my pay grade. Hideaway’s take will be of great interest, because I’m not sure that Tindale gets the interconnectivity of all of the various supply chains that will be disrupted. I think that is why Quark has been forecasting collapse in one month???

AJ

HideAway
HideAway
Reply to  el mar
March 5, 2026 2:48 pm

This is an excellent essay, going into all sorts of details about the interconnectivity of everything. Even with the detail presented, CACTUS is so much worse than he has portrayed.

Take the part about the sulphur required for copper and cobalt mining via SX/EW technologies which account for around 20-25% of all copper production, no idea about cobalt. It’s actually way worse than this as all sulphide mining of copper, the other 75-80% of mining relies upon floatation of the crushed and ground ore, which requires xanthates as the reactant to float the metal. Xanthates are also have a high requirement for sulphur.

Craig covers just the sulphuric acid content, but the big picture is all mining of copper suffers quickly from sulphur shortages. Likewise for so many other of his points. He takes a few of the cascades of failures but not all (there are indeed way too many to include in anything less than a large book or series of books)

Also while he does get the point about feedback loops affecting everything else, he doesn’t really join all the dots, just leaves his findings at the order 12 boundary….
Thus, beyond Order 12, the paradigm shifts entirely: the global system can no longer be modeled as a supply-chain shock; it must be understood as the permanent bureaucracy of geopolitical total war.

In other words instead of total collapse, he seems to be denying his own findings at the very end. I’ll have to go and watch the interview he did with Nate Hagens, that I haven’t got around to just yet…

I’m also busy, so I’ll leave it at that for now, which is in no way comprehensive of his total essay, so please go read it, then think ADD lots of feedback loops and shortages, then consider how humans will actually react…

paqnation
Reply to  el mar
March 5, 2026 4:02 pm

Whew. Just got done with that beast. I’m exhausted.
Gil’s comment is exactly what I was thinking:

Its like reading the script for the film Threads, but without the nuclear part

Flippr
Flippr
March 5, 2026 2:46 am

Thanks Rob, in regard to ideas on how to spread CACTUS awareness, I have nothing. Even at this stage of the game I can’t get anyone new to think about the debt, energy and ecology lenses, never mind CACTUS. The denial runs deep and it seems most in the US think it’s all politics, meh.

I’m so thankful to have you guys…